DC/DC Power Converter, Method for Controlling Switching Thereof, DC/DC Power Converter Arrangement and System

ABSTRACT

A DC/DC power converter converts voltage at an input of the DC/DC power converter to a voltage at an output of the DC/DC power converter, where the output voltage is a multiple of the input voltage. The DC/DC power converter comprises two switching circuits electrically connected in series, two capacitors electrically connected in series, and a resonant circuit comprising a resonant capacitor and a resonant inductor. The series connection of the two capacitors is electrically connected in parallel to the series connection of the two switching circuits. The resonant circuit is electrically connected to the two switching circuits. A first capacitor of the two capacitors is electrically connected in parallel to the input. Each switching circuit comprises two switching units electrically connected in series, wherein each switching unit comprises two or more switches electrically connected in series.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of International Application No. PCT/CN2020/114956, filed on Sep. 14, 2020, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present disclosure relates to a DC/DC power converter, a method for controlling switching of such a DC/DC power converter, a DC/DC power converter arrangement comprising a cascade of a plurality of DC/DC power converters and a system comprising such a DC/DC power converter or such a DC/DC power converter arrangement. In particular, the present disclosure relates to a DC/DC power converter comprising a resonant circuit.

BACKGROUND

DC/DC power converters are configured to convert one DC voltage level to another DC voltage level. Thus, they are used for connecting one DC voltage level to another DC voltage level. DC/DC power converters are used in different technical fields. For example, a DC/DC power converter may be used in a renewable energy device such as a Solar photo-voltaic device or a wind energy device configured to transform one level of DC to another level. A DC/DC power converter may also be used in fixed voltage transfer applications such as for DC/DC conversion in server power suppliers or power suppliers used in telecommunication equipment.

SUMMARY

Embodiments of the invention base also on the following considerations made by the inventors.

FIG. 1 shows a DC/DC power converter based on a resonant balancer concept, i.e. the DC/DC power converter comprises a resonant circuit with a resonant capacitor Cr and a resonant inductor Lr for converting a first DC voltage Vin (input voltage) at input terminals IN1 and IN2 to a second DC voltage Vout (output voltage) at output terminals OUT1 and OUT2, wherein the second DC voltage Vout is a multiple of the first DC voltage Vin. That is, the second DC voltage Vout is greater than the first DC voltage Vin. For example, the DC/DC power converter may be configured to converter the first DC voltage Vin (e.g. Vin=1 V) to the second DC voltage Vout such that the second DC voltage Vout is two times the first DC voltage Vin (e.g. Vout=2. V=2 V). The resonant balancer concept is used to generate a mirror effect of one voltage level to another voltage level. A main advantage of the resonant balancer concept is a high efficiency, because the DC/DC power converter based on the resonant balancer concept is operating at almost no switching losses. That is, the switching of the switches S01, S02, S03 and S04 of the DC/DC power converter of FIG. 1 during the operation of the DC/DC power converter causes almost no switching losses as a result of using the resonant balancer concept.

As shown in FIG. 1 , four controllable semiconductor switches S01, S02, S03 and S04 in the form of insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs) are electrically connected in series to each other. The term “connected” is used herein as a synonym for the term “electrically connected”. A resonant circuit (which also may be referred to as resonant tank) comprises a series connection of a resonant capacitor Cr and a resonant inductor Lr. The series connection of the resonant capacitor Cr and the resonant inductor Lr is connected on one side to the node between the topmost two switches S01 and S02 of the series connection of the four switches S01, S02, S03 and S04 and on the other side to the node between the bottommost two switches S03 and S04 of the series connection of the four switches S01, S02, S03 and S04.

The terms “top” and “highest” may be used as synonym for the term “topmost”. That is, the topmost element in a series connection of a plurality of elements may be referred to as the top element in said series connection or as the highest element in said series connection. The highest/topmost element in a series connection of a plurality of elements is at the highest/topmost position in the series connection of the plurality of elements. The topmost element is the preceding element of the second-topmost element in the series connection of the plurality of elements. The second-topmost element in the series connection of the plurality of elements is the subsequent element of the topmost element and the preceding element of the third-topmost element. The third-topmost element in the series connection of the plurality of elements is the subsequent element of the second-topmost element and the preceding element of the fourth-topmost element and so on.

The terms “bottom” and “lowest” may be used as synonym for the term “bottommost”. That is, the bottommost element in a series connection of a plurality of elements may be referred to as the bottom element in said series connection or as the lowest element in said series connection. The lowest/bottommost element in a series connection of a plurality of elements is at the lowest/bottommost position in the series connection of the plurality of elements. The bottommost element is the subsequent element of the second-bottommost element in the series connection of the plurality of elements. The second-bottommost element in the series connection of the plurality of elements is the preceding element of the bottommost element and the subsequent element of the third-bottommost element. The third-bottommost element in the series connection of the plurality of elements is the preceding element of the second-bottommost element and the subsequent element of the fourth-bottommost element and so on.

The term “previous” may be used as a synonym for the term “preceding”. The term “successive” may be used as a synonym for the term “subsequent”.

As shown in FIG. 1 , a series connection of two capacitors C1 and C2 is connected in parallel to the series connection of the four switches S01, S02, S03 and S04. The midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors C1 and C2 and the midpoint of the series connection of the fours witches S01, S02, S03 and S04 are connected to each other.

As shown in FIG. 1 , the input of the DC/DC power converter is connected in parallel to the topmost capacitor C (a first capacitor) of the series connection of the two capacitors C1 and C2 and in parallel to the two topmost switches S01 and S02. In particular, a second input terminal IN2 of the input is connected to the side of the topmost capacitor C1 forming the midpoint with the bottommost capacitor C2 (second capacitor) and a first input terminal IN1 of the input is connected to the other side of the topmost capacitor CL. The output of the DC/DC power converter is connected in parallel to the series connection of the two capacitors C1 and C2 and the series connection of the four switches S01, S02, S03 and S04. In particular, as shown in FIG. 1 , a first output terminal OUT1 is connected to one side of the series connection of the two capacitors C1 and C2 and to one side of the series connection of the four switches S01, S02, S03 and S04, to which the first input terminal IN1 of the input is connected to. A second output terminal OUT2 is connected to the other side of the series connection of the two capacitors C1 and C2 and the other side of the series connection of the four switches S01, S02, S03 and S04. An optional third output terminal OUT3 is electrically connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitor C1 and C2 and the midpoint of the series connection of the four switches S01, S02, S03 and S04.

The input (formed by the two input terminals IN1, IN2) and the output (formed by the two output terminals OUT1, OUT2 and optional third output terminal OUT3) of the DC/DC power converter may be referred to as energy ports of the DC/DC power converter. The four switches S01, S02, S03 and S04 are switchable such that the resonant circuit is excited between the input (i.e. energy port between IN1 and IN2) and output (energy port between OUT1 and OUT2) of the DC/DC power converter at constant duty cycle in order to match those two energy ports (i.e. energy port between IN1 and IN2=energy port between OUT1 and OUT3=energy port between OUT2 and OUT3). For operating the DC/DC power converter, the first switch S01 (topmost switch) and the third switch S03 (second-bottommost switch) are switched on and off together in complementary to the second switch S02 (second-topmost switch) and fourth switch S04 (bottommost switch), which are switched on and off together. That is, in case the first switch S01 and third switch S03 are switched from the non-conducting state to the conducting state, the second switch S02 and fourth switch S04 are switched from the conducting state to the non-conducting state and vice versa.

In case the first and third switch S01, S03 are switched on to the conducting state (the second and fourth switches S02, S04 are in the non-conducting state), then the resonant circuit starts resonating with the first capacitor C1 as voltage source. In case the second and fourth switch S02, S04 are switched on to the conducting state (the first and third switches S01, S03 are in the non-conducting state), then the resonant circuit starts resonating with the second capacitor C2 as voltage source. Thus, during such an operation of the DC/DC power converter, energy exchange between the two voltage sources C1 and C2 occurs, which internally balance their voltage levels after several resonant cycles. The DC/DC power converter of FIG. 1 is a non-isolated DC/DC power converter, because it converts the first voltage Vin at the input to the second voltage Vout at the output without a galvanic isolation.

Each switch S01, S02, S03 and S04 of the DC/DC power converter has to comprise a minimum blocking voltage of more than the highest voltage Vin at the input, i.e. between the first input terminal IN1 and the second input terminal IN2. As a result, in practical implementations these switches are implemented as high voltage devices to match with high DC link requirements, i.e. with high values for the first voltage Vin receivable at the input of the DC/DC power converter. The use of high voltage devices increases costs and reduces efficiency. For example, in solar photo-voltaic (solar PV) systems, the first voltage receivable by the input of a DC/DC power converter, such as the one of FIG. 1 , may reach up to 1500 V. Typically, for a FIT (Failures in Time) rate of 100 the device operating voltage is 65% of the blocking voltage. That is, in case the first voltage received at the input of the DC/DC power converter reaches up to 1500 V, the switches S01, S02, S03 and S04 have to be rated for at least a blocking voltage of 2308 V (1500 V=0.65·2308 V).

In view of the above-mentioned problems and disadvantages, embodiments of the present invention aim to improve the costs and efficiency of a DC/DC power converter comprising a resonant converter. An objective is to provide a DC/DC power converter with an improved efficiency and improved costs.

The objective is achieved by the embodiments of the invention as described in the enclosed independent claims. Advantageous implementations of the embodiments of the invention are further defined in the dependent claims.

A first aspect of the present disclosure provides a DC/DC power converter for converting voltage at an input of the DC/DC power converter to a voltage at an output of the DC/DC power converter, wherein the output voltage is a multiple of the input voltage. The DC/DC power converter comprises two switching circuits electrically connected in series, two capacitors electrically connected in series, and a resonant circuit comprising a resonant capacitor and a resonant inductor. The series connection of the two capacitors is electrically connected in parallel to the series connection of the two switching circuits. The resonant circuit is electrically connected to the two switching circuits. A first capacitor of the two capacitors is electrically connected in parallel to the input. The series connection of the two switching circuits is electrically connected in parallel to the output. Each switching circuit comprises two switching units electrically connected in series, wherein each switching unit comprises two or more switches electrically connected in series. A first switching circuit of the two switching circuits is electrically connected to one side of the first capacitor opposite to the other side of the first capacitor connected to the second capacitor of the two capacitors. The switches of the first switching circuit are controllable semiconductor switches; and the first switching circuit comprises one or more further capacitors electrically connected to the two switching units of the first switching circuit.

The DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect reduces losses and, thus, comprises an improved efficiency. In addition, it reduces costs. Namely, since each switching unit of the two switching circuits comprises two or more switches, each switch may be implemented by a lower voltage semiconductor switch compared to the case, in which each switching unit is replaced by a single semiconductor switch, as it is the case in the DC/DC power converter of FIG. 1 . Therefore, the DC/DC power converter topology according to the first aspect facilitates a highly integrated, low component count and high efficient DC/DC power converter.

Moreover, the one or more further capacitors allow providing a DC/DC power converter that is improved with respect to costs and component count. Namely, as a result of the one or more further capacitors, the controllable semiconductor switches of each switching unit of the first switching circuit may be switched separately for switching a respective switching unit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state or vice versa. As a result, there is no need of a pre-matching of the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit for similar switching times as well as no need of a complex driver circuitry for providing the driving signals respectively control signals in order to switch together the controllable semiconductor switches of each switching unit of the first switching circuit. This reduces the complexity, costs and component count for implementing the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect, in particular for implementing the first switching circuit thereof.

The DC/DC power converter may be a DC/DC power converter without a galvanic isolation between its input and output. That is, the DC/DC power converter may be a non-isolated DC/DC power converter. The DC/DC power converter may also be referred to as resonant DC/DC power converter, DC/DC power converter based on resonant balancer concept, resonant balancer DC/DC power converter or resonant switched capacitor converter. The term “DC/DC converter” may be used as a synonym for the term “DC/DC power converter”.

The voltage level of the voltage at the output (may also be referred to as output voltage) is greater than the voltage level of the voltage at the input (may also be referred to as input voltage), wherein the voltage level of the voltage at the output is a multiple of the voltage level of the voltage at the input. In particular, the voltage level of the voltage at the output may be an integer multiple of the voltage level of the voltage at the input. That is, the output voltage may be an integer multiple of the input voltage.

In particular, the absolute value of the output voltage is greater than the absolute value of the input voltage, wherein the absolute value of the output voltage is a multiple of the absolute value of the input voltage. The absolute value of the output voltage may be an integer multiple of the absolute value of the input voltage.

The term “connected” is used as a synonym for the term “electrically connected”.

The side of the first capacitor, to which the first switching circuit is connected to, is not connected to the second capacitor of the two capacitors. The other side of the first capacitor forms with one side of the second capacitor the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors. The midpoint of a series connection of two elements corresponds to the node between the two elements. For example, the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of a switching circuit corresponds to the node between the two switching units of the switching circuit.

A capacitor has two sides. A side of a capacitor may also be referred to as terminal of the capacitor. Thus, the first switching circuit of the two switching circuits is electrically connected to a first terminal of the first capacitor opposite to the second terminal of the first capacitor connected to the second capacitor of the two capacitors. The first terminal of the first capacitor is not connected to the second capacitor of the two capacitors.

The two capacitors may be referred to as input capacitors, DC bus capacitors or bulk storage capacitors.

The resonant circuit may be electrically connected between the midpoint of the two switching units of the first switching circuit and the midpoint of the two switching units of the second switching circuit of the two switching circuits. The resonant circuit may also be referred to as resonant tank. The resonant capacitor may comprise or correspond to one or more capacitors electrically connected in series and/or parallel to each other. The resonant inductor may comprise or correspond to one or more inductors electrically connected in series and/or parallel to each other. The capacitance of each of the two capacitors and the one or more further capacitors of the first switching circuit is greater than the capacitance of the resonant capacitor such that these capacitors do not contribute to resonance of the resonant circuit.

Each switching circuit comprises or corresponds to two switching units electrically connected in series. Each switching unit comprises or corresponds to two or more switches electrically connected in series. That is, the switching units of the two switching circuits are connected in series to each other. The switches of the two switching circuits are connected in series to each other.

Examples of a controllable semiconductor switch are a bipolar junction transistor (BJT), a field effect transistor (FET), such as a metal-oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (MOSFET), and an insulated gate bipolar transistor (IGBT). Therefore, the switches of the first switching circuit may be one or more BJTs, one or more FETs, such as one or more MOSFETs, and/or one or more IGBTs. That is, the controllable semiconductor switches may be transistors. According to an embodiment, the switches of the first switching circuit are of the same switch type, in particular of the same transistor type.

In case a switch is a controllable semiconductor switch, in particular a transistor, a diode may be connected in anti-parallel to the controllable semiconductor switch. In case a switch is an IGBT, a diode may be connected in anti-parallel to the IGBT. In particular, the diode is connected in anti-parallel to the IGBT such that the anode of the diode is connected to the emitter terminal of the IGBT and the cathode of the diode is connected to the collector terminal of the IGBT.

The number of switches of each switching unit of the first switching circuit of the two switching circuits may be the same. Alternatively or additionally, the number of switches of each switching unit of the second switching circuit of the two switching circuits may be the same. The number of switches of each switching unit of the DC/DC power converter may be the same.

The one or more further capacitors may be referred to as flying capacitor(s) or snubber capacitor(s).

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the switches of the second switching circuit of the two switching circuits are uncontrollable semiconductor switches. Alternatively, in an implementation form of the first aspect, the switches of the second switching circuit of the two switching circuits are controllable semiconductor switches, and the second switching circuit comprises one or more further capacitors electrically connected to the two switching units of the second switching circuit.

In case the switches of the second switching circuit are uncontrollable semiconductor switches, the switches of the second switching circuit are switched as a result of the voltages across the uncontrollable semiconductor switches caused by the switching of the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit. A control unit may control the switching. Thus, this reduces the control effort, because only the switching of the switches of the first switching circuit is controlled, and, thus, reduces costs for the control of the DC/DC power converter.

In case the switches of the first switching circuit and the switches of the second switching circuit are all controllable semiconductor switches, the power direction between the input and output of the DC/DC power converter may be bi-directional. This is advantageous, because the power may be delivered from the input to the output of the DC/DC power converter as well as from the output to the input of the DC/DC power converter. Moreover, the one or more further capacitors of the second switching circuit allow providing a DC/DC power converter that is improved with respect to costs and component count. Namely, as a result of the one or more further capacitors, the controllable semiconductor switches of each switching unit of the second switching circuit may be switched separately for switching a respective switching unit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state or vice versa. As a result, there is no need of a pre-matching of the controllable semiconductor switches of the second switching circuit for similar switching times as well as no need of a complex driver circuitry for providing the driving signals respectively control signals in order to switch together the controllable semiconductor switches of each switching unit of the second switching circuit. This reduces the complexity, costs and component count for implementing the DC/DC power converter according to the implementation form of the first aspect, in particular for implementing the second switching circuit thereof.

Therefore, in case the switches of each switching unit of a switching circuit of the two switching circuits, such as the first switching circuit and optionally the second switching circuit, are controllable semiconductor switches, the switching circuit comprises one or more further capacitors that are connected to the two switching units of the switching circuit.

The switches of the second switching circuit of the two switching circuits may be one or more uncontrollable semiconductor switches, such as diodes, and/or one or more controllable semiconductor switches, such as transistors. The uncontrollable semiconductor switches may also be referred to as uncontrollable unidirectional semiconductor switches. An example of an uncontrollable semiconductor switch is a diode.

The switches of the second switching circuit may be one or more bipolar junction transistors (BJTs), one or more field effect transistors (FETs), such as one or more metal-oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs), one or more insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs) and/or one or more diodes. According to an embodiment, the switches of the second switching circuit are of the same switch type.

In case a switch is a controllable semiconductor switch, a diode may be connected in parallel to the controllable semiconductor switch. In case a switch is an IGBT, a diode may be connected in anti-parallel to the IGBT. In particular, the diode is connected in parallel to the IGBT such that the anode of the diode is connected to the emitter terminal of the IGBT and the cathode of the diode is connected to the collector terminal of the IGBT.

In case the switches of the first switching circuit and the second switching circuit are controllable semiconductor switches, the power flow between the input and the output of the DC/DC power converter may be bi-directional. Therefore, in this case, the DC/DC power converter may be used for converting a first voltage at the output of the DC/DC power converter to a smaller second voltage at the input of the DC/DC power converter, wherein the second voltage is a division of the first voltage. In particular, the second voltage may be an integer division of the first voltage. That is, in the aforementioned case, power may be delivered from the input to the output of the DC/DC power converter as well as from the output to the input of the DC/DC power converter.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the number of the one or more further capacitors of a respective switching circuit of the two switching circuits is one less than the number of the two or more switches of each switching unit of the respective switching circuit.

In this case, the switching units of the respective switching circuit of the two switching circuits comprise the same number of switches.

The one or more further capacitors of a respective switching circuit allow providing a DC/DC power converter that is improved with respect to costs and component count. Namely, as a result of the one or more further capacitors, the controllable semiconductor switches of each switching unit of the respective switching circuit may be switched separately for switching a respective switching unit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state or vice versa. As a result, there is no need of a pre-matching of the controllable semiconductor switches of the respective switching circuit for similar switching times as well as no need of a complex driver circuitry for providing the driving signals respectively control signals in order to switch together the controllable semiconductor switches of each switching unit of the respective switching circuit. This reduces the complexity, costs and component count for implementing the DC/DC power converter according to the implementation form of the first aspect.

The term “respective switching circuit” refers to each switching circuit that comprises one or more further capacitors. Thus, the term “respective switching circuit” refers to each switching circuit with switching units that each comprise two or more controllable semiconductor switches. Namely, in case the two or more switches of each switching unit of a switching circuit corresponds to two or more controllable semiconductor switches, the switching circuit comprises one or more further capacitors.

In other words, the number of the one or more further capacitors of the first switching circuit may be one less than the number of the two or more switches (controllable semiconductor switches) of each switching unit of the first switching circuit, wherein the two switching units of the first switching circuit comprise the same number of switches. In case the second switching circuit comprises the one or more further capacitors, the number of the one or more further capacitors of the second switching circuit may be one less than the number of the two or more switches (controllable semiconductor switches) of each switching unit of the second switching circuit. The two switching units of the second switching circuit comprise the same number of switches.

Therefore, in case each switching unit of a respective switching circuit (such as the first switching circuit and optionally the second switching circuit) comprises two switches as switches, the respective switching circuit comprises one further capacitor. In case each switching unit of a respective switching circuit comprises three switches as switches, the respective switching circuit comprises two further capacitors etc.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, in case each switching unit of a respective switching circuit comprises two switches connected in series and the respective switching circuit comprises one further capacitor, the further capacitor is connected between the midpoint of the series connection of the two switches of a first switching unit of the respective switching circuit and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switches of the second switching unit of the respective switching circuit.

Alternatively or additionally, in case each switching unit of a respective switching circuit comprises three or more switches electrically connected in series and the respective switching circuit comprises two or more further capacitors, each further capacitor of the two or more further capacitors of the respective switching circuit is connected between a first node between two switches of a first switching unit of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit and a second node between two switches of the second switching unit of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit. The first node and the second node are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit, and the two or more further capacitors are connected to different nodes of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit.

The one or more further capacitors of a respective switching circuit allow providing a DC/DC power converter that is improved with respect to costs and component count for the reasons described already above.

In particular, the first node and the second node are equally distant to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit in terms of number of nodes that are present between the respective node (first node or second node) and said midpoint.

In other words, the position of the first node in the series connection of the first switching unit and the position of the second node in the series connection of the second switching unit are mirrored with respect to each other at the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit, and the two or more further capacitors are connected to different nodes of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit.

That is, in case each switching unit of the respective switching circuit comprises three switches and the first node in the series connection of the first switching unit is at the top of the series connection, then the second node in the series connection of the second switching unit is at the bottom of the series connection, and vice versa. In case each switching unit of the respective switching circuit comprise four or more switches and the first node in the series connection of the first switching unit is at the second-topmost/highest position of the series connection, then the second node in the series connection of the second switching unit is at the second-bottommost/lowest position of the series connection of the second switching unit etc.

In other words, in case each switching unit of a respective switching circuit comprises three or more switches electrically connected in series and the respective switching circuit comprises two or more further capacitors, each further capacitor of the two or more further capacitors of the respective switching circuit may be connected between a x^(th) node between two switches of a first switching unit of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit from one end of the series connection of the two switching units and a x^(th) node between two switches of the second switching unit of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit from the other end of the series connection of the two switching units, wherein the two or more further capacitors are connected to different nodes of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit. The “x” may be an integer greater than or equal to one and smaller than the number of switches of each switching unit of the respective switching circuit.

For example, in case the further capacitor is connected at one side to the 1^(st) node between two switches of the first switching unit from one end of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit, the further capacitor is connected at the other side to the 1^(st) node between two switches of the second switching unit from the other end of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit. In case, the further capacitor is connected at one side to the 2^(nd) node between two switches of the first switching unit from one end of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit, the further capacitor is connected at the other side to the 2^(nd) node between two switches of the second switching unit from the other end of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit etc.

The respective switching circuit corresponds to the first switching circuit and optionally to the second switching circuit.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the one or more further capacitors of the first switching circuit are dimensioned such that the voltage at a further capacitor of the one or more further capacitors, which is connected to nodes of the two switching units of the first switching circuit that are nearest to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit, corresponds to the voltage at the first capacitor divided by the number of switches per switching unit of the first switching circuit.

This is advantageous, because the one or more further capacitors provide a voltage balancing across the switches of the first switching circuit such that at the switches of the first switching circuit the same voltage is applied in case the input of the DC/DC power converter receives the input voltage. In particular, at the switches of the first switching circuit the voltage corresponding to the voltage at the first capacitor divided by the number of switches of the first switching circuit may be applied. Thus, the switches of the first switching circuit may be rated with a voltage corresponding to the voltage at the first capacitor divided by the number of switches of the first switching circuit.

The same applies to the second switching circuit of the two switching circuits, in case the second switching circuit comprises one or more further capacitors. That is, the one or more further capacitors of the second switching circuit may be dimensioned such that the voltage at a further capacitor of the one or more further capacitors, which is connected to nodes of the two switching units of the second switching circuit that are nearest to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the second switching circuit, corresponds to the voltage at the second capacitor of the two capacitors divided by the number of switches per switching unit of the second switching circuit.

This is advantageous, because the one or more further capacitors provide a voltage balancing across the switches of the second switching circuit such that at the switches of the second switching circuit the same voltage is applied in case the input of the DC/DC power converter receives the input voltage. In particular, at the switches of the second switching circuit the voltage corresponding to the voltage at the second capacitor divided by the number of switches of the second switching circuit may be applied. Thus, the switches of the second switching circuit may be rated with a voltage corresponding to the voltage at the second capacitor divided by the number of switches of the second switching circuit.

The voltage at a capacitor may also be referred to as the voltage across the capacitor or as the voltage of the capacitor. The term “nearest” is to be understood as “nearest in terms of nodes”. That is the passage “nodes of two switching units that are nearest to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units” is to be understood as “nodes of two switching units that are nearest to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units in terms of nodes (that are present between each of said nodes and said midpoint).

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the resonant capacitor and the resonant inductor are connected in series between the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the second switching circuit. Alternatively, in an implementation form of the first aspect, the resonant capacitor is electrically connected between the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the second switching circuit, and the resonant inductor is electrically connected between the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits.

The resonant capacitor and resonant inductor enable the DC/DC power converter to be operating at resonant frequency, whereby almost no switching losses are dissipated. The resonant circuit enables soft switching and provides high efficiency.

The first switching circuit may be connected in parallel to the first capacitor and the second switching circuit may be connected in parallel to the second capacitor, in case the resonant capacitor and the resonant inductor are connected in series between the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the second switching circuit.

The midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits may be electrically connected with each other, in case the resonant capacitor and the resonant inductor are connected in series between the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the second switching circuit.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the input comprises two input terminals and the output comprises two output terminals. A first input terminal of the two input terminals and a first output terminal of the two output terminals is electrically connected to one end of the series connection of the two capacitors and one end of the series connection of the two switching circuits. The second input terminal of the two input terminals is connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors. The second output terminal of the two output terminals is connected to the other end of the series connection of the two capacitors and the other end of the series connection of the two switching circuits.

The first switching circuit and the first capacitor each may be connected to the first input terminal and the first output terminal. The second switching circuit and the second capacitor each may be connected to the second output terminal. In particular, the first capacitor may be connected between the first and second input terminal. The second capacitor may be connected between the second input terminal and the second output terminal. The first input terminal and the first output terminal may be connected to each other.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the output comprises a third output terminal. The third output terminal may be electrically connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits, in case the resonant capacitor and the resonant inductor are electrically connected in series. Alternatively, the third output terminal may be electrically connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors, in case the resonant inductor is electrically connected between the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits.

The optional third output terminal may be utilised for grounding requirements. The optional third output terminal allows providing two output voltages at the output, namely a first output voltage between the first output terminal and the third output terminal and a second output voltage between the third output terminal and the second output terminal. The first and second output voltages are smaller than the output voltage between the first and second output terminal.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the DC/DC power converter comprises a control unit. The control unit is configured to complementary switch the switching units of the first switching circuit, optionally with a duty cycle of 50%, between the conducting state and the non-conducting state. Optionally, the control unit is configured to complementary switch the switching units of the first switching circuit and the second switching circuit, optionally with a duty cycle of 50%, between the conducting state and the non-conducting state.

The DC/DC power converter is based on a resonant balancer concept (i.e. the DC/DC power converter comprises the resonant circuit for the DC/DC conversion) and, thus, the control unit does not need a close loop control for operating the DC/DC power converter. Therefore, the DC/DC power converter according to the implementation form of the first aspect is advantageous, because this reduces the size, complexity and costs for controlling the DC/DC power converter, in particular the respective controllable semiconductor switches of the DC/DC power converter.

The control unit may comprise or correspond to a microcontroller, controller, microprocessor, processor, field programmable gate array (FPGA), application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) or any combination of the aforementioned components.

In case the control unit is configured to complementary switch the switching units of the second switching circuit, the switches of the second switching circuit are controllable semiconductor switches. The control unit may be configured to control the switching of the switching units in a feed-forward control (open loop control). That is, the control unit may be configured to control the switching of the switching units without a feedback control (close loop control).

A switching unit is in the conducting state when all the switches of the switching unit are in the conducting state. Correspondingly, a switching unit is in the non-conducting state when all the switches of the switching unit are in the non-conducting state. A switching unit is in a steady state when the switching unit is in the conducting state or in the non-conducting state. The conducting state may also be referred to as on state or as switched on state. The non-conducting state may also be referred to as off state or as switched off state.

In case the control unit is configured to complementary switch switching units of the first switching circuit and second switching circuit, the control unit may be configured to switch the switching units such that the switching units at the same position in the switching circuits are switched together. That is, the control unit may be configured to switch a first switching unit of the first switching circuit and a first switching unit of the second switching circuit from one state to the other state and at the same time to switch the second switching unit of the first switching circuit and the second switching unit of the second switching circuit from the other state to the one state.

The second switching unit of the first switching circuit is connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits, and the first switching unit of the first switching circuit is connected via the second switching unit to said midpoint. The first switching unit of the second switching circuit is connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits, and the second switching unit of the second switching circuit is connected via the first switching unit to said midpoint. The one state may be the conducting state and the other state may be the non-conducting state. Alternatively, the one state may be the non-conducting state and the other state may be the conducting state.

The control unit may be configured to complementary switch the switching units of the first switching circuit with a constant duty cycle of 50% between the conducting state and the non-conducting state. Optionally, the control unit may be configured to complementary switch the switching units of the first switching circuit and the second switching circuit with a constant duty cycle of 50% between the conducting state and the non-conducting state.

This is advantageous, because when complementary switching the switching units of the first switching circuit and optionally the switching units of the second switching circuits (in case the switches of the second switching circuit are controllable semiconductor switches) with a constant duty cycle of 50% no complex control by the control units is needed.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the control unit is configured to switch each switching unit of a respective switching circuit between the conducting state and non-conducting state by switching the switches of the respective switching unit after each other.

This allows using low voltage semiconductor devices and, thus, low cost controllable semiconductor switches for implementing the controllable switches of the respective switching circuit without the need of pre-matching the controllable semiconductor switches for similar switching times and without the need of complex gate driver circuitry for providing the driving signals respectively control signals in order to switch together the controllable semiconductor switches of each switching unit of the respective switching circuit. This reduces the complexity, costs and component count for implementing the DC/DC power converter according to the implementation form of the first aspect.

In other words, the control unit may be configured to switch each switching unit of a respective switching circuit between the conducting state and non-conducting state by switching the switches of the respective switching unit one after the other.

The term “respective switching circuit” refers to each switching circuit with switching units that each comprise two or more controllable semiconductor switches. Namely, in case the two or more switches of each switching unit of a switching circuit correspond to two or more controllable semiconductor switches, the two or more switches of each switching unit of the switching circuit are controllable by the control unit.

That is, the control unit may be configured to control the switching of each switching unit of a respective switching circuit between the conducting state and non-conducting state such that at any time only one switch of the switches of the respective switching unit is switched.

For example, the control unit may be configured to control the switching of each switching unit of a respective switching circuit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state by switching the switches of the respective switching unit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state after each other. That is, at any time only one switch of the respective switching unit is switched by the control unit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state for switching the respective switching unit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state. Accordingly, the control unit may be configured to control the switching of each switching unit of a respective switching circuit from the non-conducting state to the conducting state by switching the switches of the respective switching unit from the non-conducting state to the conducting state after each other. That is, at any time only one switch of the respective switching unit is switched by the control unit from the non-conducting state to the conducting state for switching the respective switching unit from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

The respective switching circuit corresponds to the first switching circuit. Optionally, the respective switching circuit corresponds to the first switching circuit and the second switching circuit.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the control unit is configured to complementary switch the two switching units of a respective switching circuit between the conducting and non-conducting state by alternately switching the switches of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit.

This reduces the complexity, costs and component count for implementing the DC/DC power converter according to the implementation form of the first aspect for the reasons described already above.

The respective switching circuit corresponds to the first switching circuit. Optionally, the respective switching circuit corresponds to the first switching circuit and the second switching circuit.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the control unit is configured to switch each switching unit of the two switching units of a respective switching circuit of the two switching circuits from the conducting state to the non-conducting state by switching the two or more switches of the respective switching unit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state after each other according to the position in the series connection of the two or more switches of the respective switching unit such that the switch of the respective switching unit connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit is switched at first from the conducting state to the non-conducting state.

The respective switching circuit corresponds to the first switching circuit. Optionally, the respective switching circuit corresponds to the first switching circuit and the second switching circuit.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the control unit is configured to switch each switching unit of the two switching units of a respective switching circuit of the two switching circuits from the non-conducting state to the conducting state by switching the two or more switches of the respective switching unit from the non-conducting state to the conducting state after each other according to the position in the series connection of the two or more switches of the respective switching unit such that the switch of the respective switching unit connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit is switched at first from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

The respective switching circuit corresponds to the first switching circuit. Optionally, the respective switching circuit corresponds to the first switching circuit and the second switching circuit. Each switching circuit comprises a first switching unit and a second switching unit.

The second switching unit of the first switching circuit is connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits, and the first switching unit of the first switching circuit is connected via the second switching unit to said midpoint. The first switching unit of the second switching circuit is connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits, and the second switching unit of the second switching circuit is connected via the first switching unit to said midpoint. That is, between the two ends of the series connection of the two switching circuits, starting at one end of the two ends, the first switching unit of the first switching circuit is followed by the second switching unit of the first switching circuit, which is followed by the first switching unit of the second switching circuit. The first switching unit of the second switching circuit is followed by the second switching unit of the second switching circuit.

The following is true in case the switches of the first switching circuit are controllable semiconductor switches, such as transistors (e.g. IGBTs or MOSFETs), and the switches of the second switching circuit are uncontrollable semiconductor switches, such as diodes:

The control unit may be configured to switch the first switching unit of the first switching circuit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state and the second switching unit of the first switching circuit from the non-conducting state to the conducting state, by alternately switching the switches of the first switching unit and the switches of the second switching unit such that

at first a switch of the first switching unit is switched from the conducting state to the non-conducting state followed by a switch of the second switching unit being switched from the non-conducting state to the conducting state,

the switches of the first switching unit are switched after each other from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, and

the switches of the second switching unit are switched after each other from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

Additionally or alternatively, the control unit may be configured to switch the first switching unit of the first switching circuit from the non-conducting state to the conducting state and the second switching unit of the first switching circuit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, by alternately switching the switches of the first switching unit and the switches of the second switching unit, such that

at first a switch of the second switching unit is switched from the conducting state to the non-conducting state followed by a switch of the first switching unit being switched from the non-conducting state to the conducting state,

the switches of the second switching unit are switched after each other from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, and

the switches of the first switching unit are switched after each other from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

The following is true in case the switches of the first switching circuit and the switches of the second switching circuit are controllable semiconductor switches, such as transistors (e.g. IGBTs or MOSFETs):

The control unit may be configured to switch the first switching units together from the conducting state to the non-conducting state and the second switching units together from the non-conducting state to the conducting state, by alternately switching the switches of the first switching units and the switches of the second switching units, such that

at first a switch of each first switching unit is switched from the conducting state to the non-conducting state (the positions of said switches in the first switching units correspond to each other) followed by a switch of each second switching unit being switched from the non-conducting state to the conducting state (the positions of said switches in the second switching units correspond to each other),

the switches of each first switching unit are switched after each other from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, and

the switches of each second switching unit are switched after each other from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

Additionally or alternatively, the control unit may be configured to switch the first switching units together from the non-conducting state to the conducting state and the second switching units together from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, by alternately switching the switches of the first switching units and the switches of the second switching units, such that

at first a switch of each second switching unit is switched from the conducting state to the non-conducting state (the positions of the switches in the second switching units correspond to each other) followed by a switch of each first switching unit being switched from the non-conducting state to the conducting state (the positions of the switches in the first switching units correspond to each other),

the switches of each second switching unit are switched after each other from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, and

the switches of each first switching unit are switched after each other from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the control unit is configured to switch the switching units between the conducting state and the non-conducting state with a switching frequency that is smaller or equal to the resonant frequency of the resonant circuit.

The switching frequency may be matched with the resonant frequency of the resonant circuit. The resonant frequency is dedicated by

${f_{res} = \frac{1}{2\pi\sqrt{C_{r}L_{r}}}},$

wherein

f_(res) is the resonant frequency of the resonant circuit, C_(r) is the resonant capacitor of the resonant circuit and L_(r) is the resonant inductor of the resonant circuit.

In an implementation form of the first aspect, the control unit is configured to switch the switches of the first switching circuit such that the voltage at a further capacitor of the one or more further capacitors, which is connected to nodes of the two switching units of the first switching circuit that are nearest to the midpoint between the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit, corresponds to the voltage at the first capacitor divided by the number of switches per switching unit of the first switching circuit.

The same applies to the second switching circuit of the two switching circuits, in case the second switching circuit comprise one or more further capacitors and, thus, controllable semiconductor switches. That is, the control unit may be configured to switch the switches of the second switching circuit such that the voltage at a further capacitor of the one or more further capacitors, which is connected to nodes of the two switching units of the second switching circuit that are nearest to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the second switching circuit, corresponds to the voltage at the second capacitor of the two capacitors divided by the number of switches per switching unit of the second switching circuit.

The term “nearest” is to be understood as “nearest in terms of nodes”.

In order to achieve the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect of the present disclosure, some or all of the implementation forms and optional features of the first aspect, as described above, may be combined with each other.

A second aspect of the present disclosure provides a method for controlling switching of a DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms, wherein the switching units of the first switching circuit are complementary switched, by a control unit, optionally with a duty cycle of 50%, between the conducting state and the non-conducting state. Optionally the switching units of the first switching circuit and the second switching circuit are complementary switched, by a control unit, optionally with a duty cycle of 50%, between the conducting state and the non-conducting state.

The control unit may be an external control unit or a control unit of the DC/DC power converter. The control unit may comprise or correspond to a microcontroller, controller, microprocessor, processor, field programmable gate array (FPGA), application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) or any combination of the aforementioned components.

In an implementation form of the second aspect, the control unit switches each switching unit of a respective switching circuit between the conducting state and non-conducting state by switching the switches of the respective switching unit after each other.

In an implementation form of the second aspect, the control unit complementary switches the two switching units of a respective switching circuit between the conducting and non-conducting state by alternately switching the switches of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit.

In an implementation form of the second aspect, the control unit switches each switching unit of the two switching units of a respective switching circuit of the two switching circuits from the conducting state to the non-conducting state by switching the two or more switches of the respective switching unit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state after each other according to the position in the series connection of the two or more switches of the respective switching unit such that the switch of the respective switching unit connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit is switched at first from the conducting state to the non-conducting state.

In an implementation form of the second aspect, the control unit switches each switching unit of the two switching units of a respective switching circuit of the two switching circuits from the non-conducting state to the conducting state by switching the two or more switches of the respective switching unit from the non-conducting state to the conducting state after each other according to the position in the series connection of the two or more switches of the respective switching unit such that the switch of the respective switching unit connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit is switched at first from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

In an implementation form of the second aspect, the control unit switches the switching units between the conducting state and the non-conducting state with a switching frequency that is smaller or equal to the resonant frequency of the resonant circuit.

In an implementation form of the second aspect, the control unit switches the switches of the first switching circuit such that the voltage at a further capacitor of the one or more further capacitors, which is connected to nodes of the two switching units of the first switching circuit that are nearest to the midpoint between the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit, corresponds to the voltage at the first capacitor divided by the number of switches per switching unit of the first switching circuit.

The description of the implementation forms and optional features of the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect is correspondingly valid for the method according to the second aspect.

The method of the second aspect and its implementation forms and optional features achieve the same advantages as the DC/DC power converter of the first aspect and its respective implementation forms and respective optional features.

In order to achieve the method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure, some or all of the implementation forms and optional features of the second aspect, as described above, may be combined with each other.

A third aspect of the present disclosure provides a DC/DC power converter arrangement comprising a cascade of a plurality of DC/DC power converters that are cascaded. Each DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters comprises two switching circuits electrically connected in series, two capacitors electrically connected in series and a resonant circuit comprising a resonant capacitor and a resonant inductor. The series connection of the two capacitors is electrically connected in parallel to the series connection of the two switching circuits. The resonant circuit is electrically connected to the two switching circuits. A first capacitor of the two capacitors is electrically connected in parallel to an input of the DC/DC power converter and the series connection of the two switching circuits is electrically connected in parallel to an output of the DC/DC power converter. The output of a first DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters is electrically connected to the input of a second DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters such that the first capacitor of the second DC/DC power converter is connected in parallel to the second capacitor of the two capacitors of the first DC/DC power converter.

A first switching circuit of the two switching circuits of a DC/DC power converter may be electrically connected to one side of the first capacitor of the DC/DC power converter opposite to the other side of the first capacitor connected to the second capacitor of the two capacitors of the DC/DC power converter.

The first capacitor of the second DC/DC power converter and the second capacitor of the first DC/DC power converter may be implemented by a single capacitor that corresponds to the parallel connection of these two capacitors. In other words, the parallel connection of the first capacitor of the second DC/DC power converter and the second capacitor of the first DC/DC power converter may be replaced by a capacitor that corresponds to said parallel connection.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement is configured to convert a first voltage (input voltage) at an input of the DC/DC power converter arrangement to a second voltage (output voltage) at an output of the DC/DC power converter arrangement, wherein the second voltage is a multiple of the first voltage. In particular, the second voltage is a multiple of the first voltage and may be greater than two times the first voltage. The second voltage may be an integer multiple of the first voltage.

According to an implementation form, the second voltage may be an integer multiple of the first voltage, wherein the integer multiple is one more than the number of DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement.

The input of the DC/DC power converter arrangement may correspond to the input of the first DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters.

In an implementation form of the third aspect, the input of each further DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters is connected to the output of a respective preceding DC/DC power converter such that the first capacitor of the respective further DC/DC power converter is connected in parallel to the second capacitor of the respective preceding DC/DC power converter.

The first capacitor of the respective further DC/DC power converter and the second capacitor of the respective preceding DC/DC power converter may be implemented by a single capacitor that corresponds to the parallel connection of these two capacitors. In other words, the parallel connection of the first capacitor of the respective further DC/DC power converter and the second capacitor of the respective preceding DC/DC power converter may be replaced by a capacitor that corresponds to said parallel connection.

In an implementation form of the third aspect, one or more DC/DC power converters of the plurality of DC/DC power converters correspond to the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement may comprise one control unit, which is configured to control the plurality of DC/DC power converters. In particular, the control unit may be configured to perform the method according to the second aspect or any of its implementation forms for controlling the plurality of DC/DC power converters.

The control unit of the DC/DC power converter arrangement may comprise or correspond to a microcontroller, controller, microprocessor, processor, field programmable gate array (FPGA), application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) or any combination of the aforementioned components.

The control unit may correspond to a control unit of one DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters, wherein the one DC/DC power converter is the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms.

In case two or more DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement comprises a control unit for controlling the respective DC/DC power converter, the control units of these two or more DC/DC power converters may be configured to communicate with each other.

According to an embodiment of the present disclosure, each DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters may correspond to the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms.

The implementation forms and optional features of the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect are correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converter arrangement according to the third aspect, in particular for one or more of the plurality of DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement according to the third aspect.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement of the third aspect and its implementation forms and optional features achieve the same advantages as the DC/DC power converter of the first aspect and its respective implementation forms and respective optional features.

In order to achieve the DC/DC power converter arrangement of the third aspect of the present disclosure, some or all of the implementation forms and optional features of the third aspect, as described above, may be combined with each other.

A fourth aspect of the present disclosure provides a system.

The system comprises a DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms, and a source that is connected to the input of the DC/DC power converter. The source is configured to provide a DC input voltage to the input of the DC/DC power converter and the DC/DC power converter is configured to convert the DC input voltage to a DC output voltage, wherein the DC output voltage is a multiple of the DC input voltage. In particular, the DC output voltage may be two times greater than the DC input voltage.

In other words, the DC/DC power converter is configured to convert the DC input voltage to a DC output voltage, wherein the level of the DC output voltage is greater than the level of the DC input voltage. In particular, the level of the DC output voltage may be two times greater than the level of the DC input voltage.

Alternatively, the system comprises a DC/DC power converter arrangement according to the third aspect or any of its implementation forms, and a source that is connected to the input of the DC/DC power converter arrangement. In particular, the source may be connected to the input of the first DC/DC power converter of the DC/DC power converter arrangement. The source is configured to provide a DC input voltage to the input of the DC/DC power converter arrangement and the DC/DC power converter arrangement is configured to convert the DC input voltage to a DC output voltage, wherein the DC output voltage is a multiple of the DC input voltage. In particular, the DC output voltage is a multiple of the DC input voltage and may be greater than two times the DC input voltage.

According to an implementation form, the DC output voltage (of the DC/DC power converter arrangement) may be an integer multiple of the DC input voltage, wherein the integer multiple is one more than the number of DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement.

In other words, the DC/DC power converter arrangement is configured to convert the DC input voltage to a DC output voltage, wherein the level of the DC output voltage is a multiple of the level of the DC input voltage and optionally is greater than two times the level of the DC input voltage. According to an implementation form, the level of the DC output voltage may be an integer multiple of the level of the DC input voltage, wherein the integer multiple is one more than the number of DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement.

The terms “level” and “voltage level” are used as synonyms.

The source may comprise or correspond to

a preceding DC/DC power converter arrangement, and/or

an AC/DC power converter, and/or

a battery (optionally rechargeable), and/or

a solar photo-voltaic (PV) system with one or more solar PV panels, and/or

one or more solar PV strings, and/or

a wind energy system etc.

The preceding DC/DC power converter arrangement may correspond to the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms or to the DC/DC power converter arrangement according to the third aspect or any of its implementation forms.

In an implementation form of the fourth aspect, the system may further comprise an electric circuit that is connected to the output of the DC/DC power converter. Alternatively, the system may further comprise an electric circuit that is connected to the output of the DC/DC power converter arrangement. In particular, the electric circuit may be connected to the output of the last DC/DC power converter in the cascade of DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement.

The electric circuit may comprise or correspond to

a DC/DC power converter arrangement, and/or

a DC/AC power converter, and/or

a DC transmission system, and/or

a solid state transformer, and/or

an electric load.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement may correspond to the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms or to the DC/DC power converter arrangement according to the third aspect or any of its implementation forms.

The implementation forms and optional features of the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect are correspondingly valid for the system according to the fourth aspect, in particular for the DC/DC power converter of the system according to the fourth aspect. The implementation forms and optional features of the DC/DC power converter arrangement according to the third aspect are correspondingly valid for the system according to the fourth aspect, in particular for the DC/DC power converter arrangement of the system according to the fourth aspect.

The system of the fourth aspect and its implementation forms and optional features achieve the same advantages as the DC/DC power converter of the first aspect and its respective implementation forms and respective optional features.

In order to achieve the system of the fourth aspect of the present disclosure, some or all of the implementation forms and optional features of the fourth aspect, as described above, may be combined with each other.

It has to be noted that all devices, elements, units and means described in the present application could be implemented in the software or hardware elements or any kind of combination thereof. All steps which are performed by the various entities described in the present application as well as the functionalities described to be performed by the various entities are intended to mean that the respective entity is adapted to or configured to perform the respective steps and functionalities. Even if, in the following description of specific embodiments, a specific functionality or step to be performed by external entities is not reflected in the description of a specific detailed element of that entity which performs that specific step or functionality, it should be clear for a skilled person that these methods and functionalities can be implemented in respective software or hardware elements, or any kind of combination thereof.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The above described aspects and implementation forms will be explained in the following description of specific embodiments in relation to the enclosed drawings, in which

FIG. 1 exemplarily shows a DC/DC power converter comprising a resonant circuit.

FIG. 2A shows a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 2B shows an optional control unit of a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIGS. 3A and 3B each show a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIGS. 4A and 4B each show a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIGS. 5A and 5B each show a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIGS. 6A to 6D show different embodiments of switching circuits for a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIGS. 7A to 7J show different states, in particular two steady states and transient switching states of a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention, when the DC/DC power converter is switched between the two steady states according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIGS. 8A and 8B each show a DC/DC power converter arrangement according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIGS. 9A and 9B each show a DC/DC power converter arrangement according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 10 shows a system according to an embodiment of the present invention.

In the Figures, corresponding elements are labelled with same reference signs.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS

FIG. 2A shows a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

The above description of the DC/DC power converter of the first aspect or any of its implementation forms is accordingly valid for the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 2A.

The DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 2A comprises a resonant circuit 3, a series connection of two switching circuits 1 and 2 and a series connection of two capacitors C1 and C2. The series connection of the two capacitors C1, C2 is connected in parallel to the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2. The resonant circuit 3 is electrically connected to the two switching circuits 1, 2.

The DC/DC power converter 4 further comprises an input with two input terminals IN1, IN2 and an output with two output terminals OUT1, OUT2. The DC/DC power converter 4 is configured to convert a voltage Vin (input voltage) at the input to a voltage Vout (output voltage) at the output, wherein the voltage Vout at the output is a multiple of the voltage Vin at the input.

A first capacitor C1 of the two capacitors C1, C2 is connected in parallel to the input of the DC/DC power converter 4 such that the voltage Vin receivable at the input of the DC/DC power converter 4 corresponds to the voltage across the first capacitor C1. The series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2 is connected in parallel to the output of the DC/DC power converter 4 such that the voltage Vout at the output of the DC/DC power converter 4 corresponds to the voltage across the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2.

A first switching circuit 1 of the two switching circuits 1, 2 is connected to one side of the first capacitor C1 opposite to the other side of the first capacitor C1 connected to the second capacitor C2 of the two capacitors C1, C2. Thus, the second switching circuit 2 of the two switching circuits 1, 2 is connected to one side of the second capacitor C2 opposite to the other side of the second capacitor C2 connected to the first capacitor C1.

The resonant circuit 3 comprises a resonant capacitor Cr (not shown in FIG. 2A) and a resonant inductor Lr (not shown in FIG. 2A). According to one alternative, the resonant capacitor Cr and the resonant inductor Lr may be connected in series, wherein this series connection is connected on one side to the first switching circuit 1 and on the other side to the second switching circuit 2. This alternative is shown in FIG. 3A. In this case, the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors C1, C2 and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2 are connected to each other (as shown in FIGS. 2A and 3A). According to another alternative, the resonant capacitor Cr may be connected on one side to the first switching circuit 1 and on the other side to the second switching circuit 2. In addition, the resonant inductor Lr may be connected between the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors C1, C2 and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2. This alternative is shown in FIG. 3B. In this case, the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors C1, C2 is connected via the resonant inductor Lr to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2 (not shown in FIGS. 2A, but shown in FIG. 3B).

The first switching circuit 1 comprises two switching units 11 and 12 that are connected in series. The second switching circuit 2 comprises two switching units 21 and 22 that are connected in series. Thus, the four switching units 11, 12, 21 and 22 are connected in series to each other. Each switching unit of the four switching units 11, 12, 21 and 22 comprises two or more switches that are electrically connected in series. That is, the switches (of the four switching units 11, 12, 21 and 22) of the two switching circuits 1, 2 are electrically connected in series.

The two or more switches of each switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 are controllable semiconductor switches, such as transistors. Therefore, the switching of the switches of the first switching circuit 1 may be actively controlled by a control unit (this is indicated in FIG. 2A by the arrows at each switch of the first and second switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1). For example, the switches of each switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 may be one or more bipolar junction transistors (BJTs), one or more field effect transistors (FETs), such as one or more metal-oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs), and/or one or more insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs).

Since the switches of the first switching circuit 1 are controllable semiconductor switches, the first switching circuit 1 comprises one or more further capacitors C11 that are connected to the first switching unit 11 and the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

The switches of each switching unit 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 may either be uncontrollable semiconductor switches, such as diodes, or controllable semiconductor switches, such as transistors. The aforementioned first alternative is shown in FIG. 5 and the aforementioned second alternative is shown in FIG. 4 . In case, the switches of the second switching circuit 2 are controllable semiconductor switches, then the second switching circuit 2 comprises one or more further capacitors C21 that are electrically connected to the first switching unit 21 and second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2 (not shown in FIG. 2A, but shown in FIG. 4 ).

The capacitance of each of the two capacitors C1, C2, the one or more further capacitors C11 of the first switching circuit 1 and the optional one or more further capacitors (not shown in FIG. 2A) of the second switching circuit 2 is greater than the capacitance of the resonant capacitor Cr of the resonant circuit 3 such that these capacitors do not contribute to resonance of the resonant circuit 3.

The number of switches of each switching unit of the first switching circuit 1 and/or the second switching circuit 2 may be the same. The switches of each switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 (being controllable semiconductor switches) may be of the same switch type. The switches of each switching unit 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 may be of the same switch type.

A first input terminal IN1 of the input and a first output terminal OUT1 of the output are connected to each other. The second input terminal IN2 of the input and the midpoint between the series connection of the two capacitors C1, C2 are connected to each other. The series connection of the two capacitors C1, C2 is connected between the first input terminal IN1 and the second output terminal OUT2 of the output and the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2 is connected between the first output terminal OUT 1 and the second output terminal OUT 2.

According to FIG. 2A, each switching circuit 1, 2 comprises an X-terminal, a Y-terminal and a Z-terminal. The X-terminal of the first switching circuit 1 is connected to the first input terminal IN1 and the first output terminal OUT 1. The Y-terminal of the first switching circuit 1 is connected to the X-terminal of the second switching circuit 2. The Y-terminal of the second switching circuit 2 is connected to the second output terminal OUT 2 and to one side of the second capacitor C2 opposite to the side of the second capacitor C2 that is connected to the first capacitor CL. The Z-terminal of the first switching circuit 1 and the Z-terminal of the second switching circuit 2 are connected to the resonant circuit 3. As shown in FIG. 2A, the series connection of the two switching units 11 and 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is connected between the X-terminal and Y-terminal of the first switching circuit 1. The Z-terminal of the first switching circuit 1 is connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11 and 12 of the first switching circuit 1. Further, as shown in FIG. 2A, the series connection of the two switching units 21 and 22 of the second switching circuit 2 is connected between the X-terminal and Y-terminal of the second switching circuit 2. The Z-terminal of the second switching circuit 2 is connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 21 and 22 of the second switching circuit 2.

The topmost switching unit 11 of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 may be referred to as first switching unit of the first switching circuit 1. Among the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1, the topmost switching unit 11 (first switching unit 11) of the first switching circuit 1 is furthest away from the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2. The bottommost switching unit 12 of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 may be referred to as second switching unit of the first switching circuit 1. The bottommost switching unit 12 (second switching unit 12) of the first switching circuit 1 is connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2. The first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is connected via the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2.

The topmost switching unit 21 of the series connection of the two switching units 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 may be referred to as first switching unit of the second switching circuit 2. The topmost switching unit 21 (first switching unit 21) of the second switching circuit 2 is connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2. The bottommost switching unit 22 of the series connection of the two switching units 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 may be referred to as second switching unit of the second switching circuit 2. Among the two switching units 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2, the bottommost switching unit 22 (second switching unit 22) of the second switching circuit 2 is furthest away from the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2. The second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2 is connected via the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2 to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2.

Optionally, the DC/DC power converter 4 may comprise a control unit configured to complementary switch the switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 between the conducting state and the non-conducting state. An example of such a control unit is shown in FIG. 2B. According to an embodiment, the control unit is configured to complementary switch the switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 with a duty cycle of 50%.

In case, the switches of the second switching circuit 2 are controllable semiconductor switches, the optional control unit may be configured to complementary switch the switching units 11, 12, 21, 22 of the first switching circuit 1 and the second switching circuit 2 between the conducting state and the non-conducting state. The optional control unit may be configured to switch the first switching units 11 and 21 of the first and second switching circuit 1, 2 from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, while switching the second switching units 12 and 22 of the first and second switching circuit 1, 2 from the non-conducting state to the conducting state. Accordingly, the optional control unit may be configured to switch the first switching units 11 and 21 of the first and second switching circuit 1, 2 from the non-conducting state to the conducting state, while switching the second switching units 12 and 22 of the first and second switching circuit 1, 2 from the conducting state to the non-conducting state. According to an embodiment, the control unit is configured to complementary switch the switching units 11, 12, 21, 22 of the first and second switching circuit 1, 2 with a duty cycle of 50%.

The control unit may be configured to switch each switching unit of the first switching circuit 1 and optionally second switching circuit 2 between the conducting state and the non-conducting state by switching the switches (controllable semiconductor switches) of the respective switching unit after each other.

An example of a control of the switching of the switches of the first switching circuit 1 and optionally the second switching circuit 2 is described below with respect to FIGS. 7A to 7J.

FIG. 2B shows an optional control unit of a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

The description of the control unit of the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms is valid for the control unit 5 of FIG. 2B. The control unit 5 of FIG. 2B is configured to perform the method according to the second aspect or any of its implementation forms.

The control unit 5 may comprise or correspond to a microcontroller, controller, microprocessor, processor, field programmable gate array (FPGA), application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) or any combination of the aforementioned components.

The control unit 5 is configured to provide to each of the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 control signals CS11 ₁, . . . , CS11 _(n), CS12 ₁, . . . , CS12 _(n) for controlling the switching of the controllable semiconductor switches. In case the switches of the second switching circuit 2 are also controllable semiconductor switches, the control unit 5 may be configured to provide to each of the controllable semiconductor switches of the second switching circuit 2 control signals for controlling the switching of the controllable semiconductor switches.

FIGS. 3A and 3B each show a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

The DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 3A and the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 3B correspond to the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 2A. Thus, the description of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 2A is correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converters 4 of FIGS. 3A and 3B. Therefore, in the following mainly additional features of the DC/DC power converters 4 of FIGS. 3A and 3B with respect to the DC/DC power converter of FIG. 2A are described. The FIGS. 3A and 3B show two implementation forms of the resonant circuit 3.

According to FIG. 3A the resonant capacitor Cr and resonant inductor Lr of the resonant circuit 3 are connected in series to each other. The series connection of the resonant capacitor Cr and the resonant inductor Lr is connected on one side to the first switching circuit 1, in particular to the Z-terminal of the first switching circuit 1, and on the side to the second switching circuit 2, in particular to the Z-terminal of the second switching circuit 2.

According to FIG. 3B the resonant capacitor Cr is connected on one side to the first switching circuit 1, in particular to the Z-terminal of the first switching circuit 1, and on the side to the second switching circuit 2, in particular to the Z-terminal of the second switching circuit 2. The resonant inductor Lr is connected between the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitor C1, C2 and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits 1, 2.

As shown in FIGS. 3A and 3B the output of the DC/DC power converter 4 may comprise an optional third output terminal OUT3. According to FIG. 3A, the optional third output terminal OUT3, the midpoint between the two switching circuits 1, 2, the midpoint between the two capacitors C1, C2 and the second input terminal IN2 are connected to each other. According to FIG. 3B, the optional third output terminal OUT3, the midpoint between the two capacitors C1, C2 and the second input terminal IN2 are connected to each other.

FIGS. 4A and 4B each show a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

The DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4A corresponds to the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 3A, wherein an implementation form of the two switching circuits 1, 2 is shown. The description of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIGS. 2 and 3A is correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4A. Therefore, in the following mainly additional features of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4A with respect to the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIGS. 2 and 3A are described.

As shown in FIG. 4A, each switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 and each switching unit 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 comprises two controllable semiconductor switches. Thus, the series connection of the first switching circuit 1 and the second switching circuit 2 corresponds to a series connection of eight controllable semiconductor switches 11 a, 11 b, 12 a, 12 b, 21 a, 21 b, 22 a and 22 b. The number of switches of each switching unit may be greater than two as outlined already above. The number of switches of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 may beneficially be the same, as shown in FIG. 4A. The number of switches of the two switching units 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 may beneficially be the same, as shown in FIG. 4A. The number of switches of each switching unit 11, 12, 21, 22 of the first and second switching circuit 1, 2 may beneficially be the same, as shown in FIG. 4A.

According to the embodiment of FIG. 4A, the controllable semiconductor switches are insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs). Alternatively or additionally, the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 and second switching circuit 2 may be of at least one different transistor type. That is, the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 and second switching circuit 2 may be one or more IGBTs, one or more bipolar junctions transistors (BJTs) and/or one or more field effect transistors (FETs), such as one or more metal-oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFMTs). Beneficially, the controllable semiconductor switches of the first and second switching circuit 1, 2 are of the same transistor type, as shown in FIG. 4A.

As shown in FIG. 4A, the eight IGBTs 11 a, 11 b, 12 a, 12 b, 21 a, 21 b, 22 a and 22 b are connected to each other in series as follows: The collector terminal of the topmost IGBT 11 a in the series connection of IGBTs is connected to the first input terminal IN1 and first output terminal OUT1. The emitter terminal of the bottommost IGBT 22 b in the series connection of IGBTs is connected to the second output terminal OUT2. The other six IGBTs 11 b, 12 a, 12 b, 21 a, 21 b and 22 a are connected such that the collector terminal of each IGBT of these six IGBTs is connected to the emitter terminal of the respective preceding IGBT and the emitter terminal of each IGBT of these six IGBTs is connected to the collector terminal of the respective subsequent IGBT. For example, the collector terminal of the second-topmost IGBT 11 b in the series connection of IGBTs is connected to the emitter terminal of the topmost IGBT 11 a (i.e. the respective preceding IGBT) in the series connection of IGBTs. The emitter terminal of the second-topmost IGBT 11 b is connected to the collector terminal of the third-topmost IGBT 12 a (the respective subsequent IGBT) in the series connection of IGBTs.

An optional diode may be connected in parallel to each IGBT, as shown in FIG. 4A. In particular, an optional diode may be connected in parallel to each IGBT such that the anode of the optional diode is connected to the emitter terminal of the respective IGBT and the cathode of the optional diode is connected to the collector terminal of the respective IGBT.

The control signals for controlling the IGBTs may be provided to the gate terminals of the IGBTs. That is, the control signals may be provided to the control terminals of the controllable semiconductor switches.

In case the controllable semiconductor switches 11 a, 11 b, 12 a, 12 b, 21 a, 21 b, 22 a, 22 b of the first and second switching circuit 1, 2 are implemented by a different transistor type, the series connection of these controllable semiconductor switches is implemented correspondingly. In such a case, an optional diode may be connected in anti-parallel to each controllable semiconductor switch.

Since each switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 and each switching unit 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 comprises two controllable semiconductor switches, the first switching circuit 1 and the second switching circuit 2 each comprise a further capacitor C11 respectively C21. The number of further capacitors of a switching circuit depends on the number of controllable semiconductor switches of each switching unit of the switching circuit. In particular, the number of further capacitors of a switching circuit is one less than the number of controllable semiconductor switches of each switching unit of the switching circuit. Therefore, the number of further capacitors of the first switching circuit 1 and of the second switching circuit 2 may be greater than one, because the number of switches of each switching unit may be greater than two, as outlined already above.

As shown in FIG. 4A, the further capacitor C11 of the first switching circuit 1 is connected on one side to the midpoint between the two controllable semiconductor switches 11 a and 11 b of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 and on the other side to the midpoint between the two controllable semiconductor switches 12 a and 12 b of the second switching unit 12 of the second switching circuit 2. The further capacitor C21 of the second switching circuit 2 is connected on one side to the midpoint between the two controllable semiconductor switches 21 a and 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2 and on the other side to the midpoint between the two controllable semiconductor switches 22 a and 22 b of the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2.

The further capacitor C11 of the first switching circuit may be dimensioned such that the voltage at the further capacitor C11 is equal to the voltage Vin at the first capacitor C1 divided by the number of controllable semiconductor switches per switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1. This number correspond to two according to the embodiment of FIG. 4A. The same may apply to the further capacitor C21. That is, the further capacitor C12 of the second switching circuit may be dimensioned such that the voltage at the further capacitor C21 is equal to the voltage at the second capacitor C2 divided by the number of controllable semiconductor switches per switching unit 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2. This number correspond to two according to the embodiment of FIG. 4A.

Furthermore, as shown in FIG. 4A the series connection of the resonant capacitor Cr and resonant inductor Lr of the resonant circuit 3 is connected on one side to the midpoint between the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 and on the other side to the midpoint between the two switching units 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2. The midpoint between the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is connected to the Z-terminal of the first switching circuit 1. The midpoint between the two switching units 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 is connected to the Z-terminal of the second switching circuit 2.

The DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4B corresponds to the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4A. The difference between these two DC/DC power converters 4 is the implementation form of the resonant circuit 3, which corresponds to the implementation form of the resonant circuit 3 of the DC/DC power converter of FIG. 3B. Therefore, the above description of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4A is correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4B and in the following mainly the difference between the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4A and the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4B is described. For the description of the implementation of the resonant circuit 3 of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4B reference is made to the description of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 3B.

As shown in FIG. 4B, the resonant capacitor Cr of the resonant circuit 3 is connected on one side to the midpoint between the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 and on the other side to the midpoint between the two switching units 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2. The resonant inductor Lr of the resonant circuit 3 is connected on one side to the midpoint between the two capacitors C1, C2 and on the other side to the midpoint between the two switching circuits 1, 2.

FIGS. 5A and 5B each show a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

The DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5A corresponds to the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 4A, wherein the second switching circuit 2 is implemented differently. The description of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIGS. 2, 3A and 4A is correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5A. Therefore, in the following mainly the difference of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5A with respect to the DC/DC power converter 4 of 4A is described.

As shown in FIG. 5A, the two switches of each switching unit 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 are not controllable semiconductor switches. Namely, the two switches of each switching unit 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 are two uncontrollable semiconductor switches, in particular two diodes. Therefore, the series connection of the two switching units 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 of the DC/DC power converter 4 according to FIG. 5A corresponds to a series connection of four diodes 21 a, 21 b, 22 a and 22 b. As outlined already above, each switching unit 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 may comprise more than two uncontrollable semiconductor switches, in particular more than two diodes.

As shown in FIG. 5A, the four diodes 21 a, 21 b, 22 a and 22 b are connected to each other in series as follows: The cathode of the topmost diode 21 a in the series connection of diodes is connected to the midpoint between the two switching circuits 1, 2. The anode of the bottommost diode 22 b in the series connection of diodes is connected to the output terminal OUT2. The other two diodes 21 b and 22 a of the four diodes of the second switching circuit 2 are connected such that the cathode of each diode of these two diodes is connected to the anode of the respective preceding diode and the anode of each diode of these two diodes is connected to the cathode of the respective subsequent diode. That is, the cathode of the second-topmost diode 21 b in the series connection of diodes is connected to the anode of the topmost diode 21 a (the respective preceding diode) in the series connection of diodes. The anode of the second-topmost diode 21 b is connected to the cathode of the second-bottommost diode 22 a (the respective subsequent diode) in the series connection of diodes. The cathode of the second-bottommost diode 22 a is connected to the anode of the second-topmost diode 21 b (the respective preceding diode) and the anode of the second-bottommost diode 22 a is connected to the cathode of the bottommost diode 22 b (the respective subsequent diode) in the series connection of diodes.

The second switching circuit 2 of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5A comprises no further capacitor, because the switches of the second switching circuit 2 are uncontrollable semiconductor switches.

The DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5B corresponds to the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5A. The difference between these two DC/DC power converters 4 is the implementation form of the resonant circuit 3, which corresponds to the implementation form of the resonant circuit 3 of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIGS. 3B and 4B. Therefore, the above description of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5A is correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5B. For the description of the implementation of the resonant circuit 3 of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5B reference is made to the description of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIGS. 3B and 4B.

FIG. 6 shows different embodiments of switching circuits for a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 6A shows an implementation form of the first switching circuit 1 of a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention. This implementation form corresponds to the implementation form of the first switching circuit 1 of the DC/DC power converters 4 of FIGS. 4A and 4B. Therefore, reference is made to the description of the DC/DC power converters 4 of FIGS. 4A and 4B for describing the first switching circuit 1 shown in FIG. 6A. As shown in FIGS. 4A and 4B the second switching circuit 2 of the DC/DC power converter 4 may be implemented in line with the implementation form of the first switching circuit 1 shown in FIG. 6A.

FIG. 6B shows an implementation form of the second switching circuit 2 of a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention. This implementation form corresponds to the implementation form of the second switching circuit 2 of the DC/DC power converters 4 of FIGS. 5A and 5B. Therefore, reference is made to the description of the DC/DC power converters 4 of FIGS. 5A and 5B for describing the second switching circuit 1 shown in FIG. 6B.

As outlined already above, each switching unit of a respective switching circuit (first switching circuit 1 and second switching circuit 2) may comprise two or more switches. FIGS. 6C and 6D each show a case in which each switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 comprises more than two controllable semiconductor switches and, thus, the first switching circuit 1 comprises more than one further capacitor. The description with respect to the DC/DC converters 4 of FIGS. 4A and 4B is correspondingly valid for the first switching circuit 1 of FIGS. 6C and 6D.

FIG. 6C shows the case, in which each switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 comprises three controllable semiconductor switches. FIG. 6D shows the case, in which each switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 comprises four controllable semiconductor switches. The description of the FIGS. 6C and 6D is correspondingly valid for cases, in which each switching unit 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 comprises more than four controllable semiconductor switches. The description of the first switching circuit 1 of FIGS. 6C and 6D is correspondingly valid for the second switching circuit 2, in case the switches of the second switching circuit 2 are controllable semiconductor switches.

For the description of the FIGS. 6C and 6D, it is assumed that the controllable semiconductor switches 11 a, 11 b, 11 c, 11 d, 12 a, 12 b, 12 c and 12 d are IGBTs. This is only by way of example and does not limit the present disclosure. As outlined already above, alternatively or additionally the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 may correspond to one or more other transistor types. Beneficially, the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 are of the same transistor type.

As shown in FIG. 6C, each further capacitor of the two further capacitors C11, C12 of the first switching circuit 1 is connected between a first node between two switches of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 and a second node between two switches of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit. The first node and the second node are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1, and the two further capacitors C11, C12 are connected to different nodes of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

In particular, a first further capacitor C11 of the two further capacitors C11, C12 of the first switching circuit 1 is connected on one side to the node between the IGBT 11 b and IGBT 11 c (a first node) of the first switching unit 11. The first further capacitor C11 is connected on the other side to the node between the IGBT 12 a and IGBT 12 b (a second node) of the second switching unit 12. The node between the IGBTs 11 b and 11 c of the first switching unit 11 and the node between the IGBTs 12 a and 12 b of the second switching unit 12 are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1. That is, the first node of the first switching unit 11 and the second node of the second switching unit 12, between which the first further capacitor C11 is connected, are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

Furthermore, as shown in FIG. 6C, the second further capacitor C12 is connected on one side to the node between the IGBT 11 a and IGBT 11 b (a first node) of the first switching unit 11. The second further capacitor C12 is connected on the other side to the node between the IGBT 12 b and IGBT 12 c (a second node) of the second switching unit 12. The node between the IGBTs 11 a and 11 b of the first switching unit 11 and the node between the IGBTs 12 b and 12 c of the second switching unit 12 are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1. That is, the first node of the first switching unit 11 and the second node of the second switching unit 12, between which the second further capacitor C12 is connected, are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

The two further capacitors C11, C12 of the first switching circuit 1 may be dimensioned such that the voltage at the first further capacitor C11 is equal to the voltage at the first capacitor C1 divided by the number of switches per switching unit of the first switching circuit 1. The first further capacitor C11 is the further capacitor that is connected to nodes of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 that are nearest to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

The above description of FIG. 6C is correspondingly valid for the first switching circuit 1 of FIG. 6D.

As shown in FIG. 6D, each further capacitor of the three further capacitors C11, C12, C13 of the first switching circuit 1 is connected between a first node between two switches of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 and a second node between two switches of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1. The first node and the second node are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1, and the three further capacitors C11, C12, C13 are connected to different nodes of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

In particular, a first further capacitor C11 of the three further capacitors C11, C12, C13 of the first switching circuit 1 is connected on one side to the node between the IGBT 11 c and IGBT 11 d (a first node) of the first switching unit 11. The first further capacitor C11 is connected on the other side to the node between the IGBT 1 a and IGBT 12 b (a second node) of the second switching unit 12. The node between the IGBTs 11 c and 11 d of the first switching unit 11 and the node between the IGBTs 12 a and 12 b of the second switching unit 12 are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1. That is, the first node of the first switching unit 11 and the second node of the second switching unit 12, between which the first further capacitor C11 is connected, are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

Further, as shown in FIG. 6D, a second further capacitor C12 of the three further capacitors C11, C12, C13 of the first switching circuit 1 is connected on one side to the node between the IGBT 11 b and IGBT 11 c (a first node) of the first switching unit 11. The second further capacitor C12 is connected on the other side to the node between the IGBT 12 b and IGBT 12 c (a second node) of the second switching unit 12. The node between the IGBTs 11 b and 11 c of the first switching unit 11 and the node between the IGBTs 12 b and 12 c of the second switching unit 12 are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1. That is, the first node of the first switching unit 11 and the second node of the second switching unit 12, between which the second further capacitor C12 is connected, are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

Furthermore, as shown in FIG. 6D, the third further capacitor C13 is connected on one side to the node between the IGBT 11 a and IGBT 11 b (a first node) of the first switching unit 11. The third further capacitor C13 is connected on the other side to the node between the IGBT 12 c and IGBT 12 d (a second node) of the second switching unit 12. The node between the IGBTs 11 a and 11 b of the first switching unit 11 and the node between the IGBTs 12 c and 12 d of the second switching unit 12 are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1. That is, the first node of the first switching unit 11 and the second node of the second switching unit 12, between which the third further capacitor C13 is connected, are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

The three further capacitors C11, C2, C13 of the first switching circuit 1 may be dimensioned such that the voltage at the first further capacitor C11 is equal to the voltage at the first capacitor C1 divided by the number of switches per switching unit of the first switching circuit 1. The first further capacitor C11 is the further capacitor that is connected to nodes of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 that are nearest to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

FIGS. 7A to 7J show different states, in particular two steady states and transient switching states of a DC/DC power converter according to an embodiment of the present invention, when the DC/DC power converter is switched between the two steady states according to an embodiment of the present invention.

The DC/DC power converter 4 of FIGS. 7A to 7J corresponds to the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5A. The above description of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 5A is correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIGS. 7A to 7J. The controllable semiconductor switches 11 a, 11 b, 12 a and 12 b of the first switching circuit 1 of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 7 are IGBTs. This is only by way of example and does not limit the present disclosure. That is, the switches of the first switching circuit 1 may be implemented by a different transistor type, as outlined already above.

In the following, a control of the switching of the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b, 12 a and 12 b of the first switching circuit 1 of the DC/DC power converter 4 shown in FIG. 7 for controlling operation of the DC/DC power converter 4 is described with respect to the FIGS. 7A to 7J:

This control may be performed by a control unit, such as the control unit shown in FIG. 2B. The control unit may be a part of the DC/DC power converter 4 or an external control unit.

The two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 are complementary switched between the conducting state and the non-conducting state. Optionally, they are complementary switched with a duty cycle of 50%.

A switching unit is in the conducting state when all the switches of the switching unit are in the conducting state. Correspondingly, a switching unit is in the non-conducting state when all the switches of the switching unit are in the non-conducting state. A switching unit is in a steady state when the switching unit is in the conducting state or in the non-conducting state. The conducting state may also be referred to as on state or as switched on state. The non-conducting state may also be referred to as off state or as switched off state.

The switching of the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b, 12 a, 12 b of the first switching circuit 1 cause the voltages across the uncontrollable semiconductor switches 21 a, 21 b, 22 a, 22 b, which are diodes, of the second switching circuit 2 to change. As a result, due to the switching of the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b, 12 a, 12 b of the first switching circuit 1, the switching units 21, 22 of the second switching circuit 2 are also complementary switched. In particular, the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2 is switched according with (in line with) the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 and the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2 is switched according with (in line with) the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1. That is, in case the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is in the conducting state, the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2 is also in the conducting state, while the two second switching units 12, 22 are in the non-conducting state, and vice versa. The same applies for the second switching units 12, 22 of the DC/DC power converter 4.

Therefore, as a result of the controlled switching of the switches 11 a, 11 b, 21 a, 12 b of the first switching circuit 1, the first switching units 11, 21 are switched together between the conducting and non-conducting state and the second switching units 12, 22 are switched together between the non-conducting and conducting state complementary to the switching of the first switching units 11, 21.

FIG. 7A shows a first steady state of the DC/DC power converter 4, in which the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 and the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2 are in the conducting state, while the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 and the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2 are in the non-conducting state. FIG. 7F shows a second steady state of the DC/DC power converter 4, in which the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 and the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2 are in the conducting state, while the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 and the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2 are in the non-conducting state. In the first steady state of the DC/DC power converter 4 resonance occurs between the first capacitor C1 and the resonant circuit of the DC/DC power converter 4. In the second steady state of the DC/DC power converter 4 resonance occurs between the second capacitor C2 and the resonant circuit of the DC/DC power converter 4.

In FIGS. 7A to 7J conducting components of the DC/DC power converter are highlighted in bold. In particular, the parts of the DC/DC power converter that are highlighted in bold and are not dotted represent active current paths via which current flows during the operation of the DC/DC power converter. An IGBT that is represented with dotted lines is in the conducting state.

FIGS. 7B to 7E show the transient switching states of the DC/DC power converter 4, when controlling the switching of the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 such that the DC/DC power converter 4 is switched from the first steady state, shown in FIG. 7A, to the second steady state, shown in FIG. 7F. FIGS. 7G to 7J show the transient switching states of the DC/DC power converter 4, when controlling the switching of the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 such that the DC/DC power converter 4 is switched from the second steady state, shown in FIG. 7F, to the first steady state, shown in FIG. 7A.

As shown in FIG. 7A, in the first steady state the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 are in the conducting state and the diodes 21 a, 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2 are in the conducting state (forward biased). The IGBTs 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 are in the non-conducting state and the diodes 22 a, 22 b of the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2 are in the non-conducting state (reverse biased). Therefore, a current flows via the first capacitor C1, the two IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1, the resonant capacitor Cr and resonant inductor Lr of the resonant circuit 3 and the two diodes 21 a, 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2. In the first steady state, the first capacitor C1 is discharged.

As shown in FIG. 7F, in the second steady state the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 are in the non-conducting state and the diodes 21 a, 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2 are in the non-conducting state (reverse biased). The IGBTs 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 are in the conducting state and the diodes 22 a, 22 b of the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2 are in the conducting state (forward biased). Therefore, a current flows via the resonant capacitor Cr and resonant inductor Lr of the resonant circuit 3, the two IGBTs 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1, the second capacitor C2 and the two diodes 22 a, 22 b of the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2. In the second steady state, the second capacitor C2 is charged.

In the following the control of the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b, 1 a and 12 b of the first switching circuit 1 for switching the DC/DC power converter 4 from the first steady state (shown in FIG. 7A) to the second steady state (shown in FIG. 7 F) is described:

As shown in FIG. 7B, at first the IGBT 11 b of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched off to the non-conducting state. As a result, current flows via the first capacitor C1, the topmost IGBT 11 a in the series connection of IGBTs of the first switching circuit 1, the further capacitor C11, the diode connected in parallel to the second-bottommost IGBT 12 a (IGBT 12 a is in the non-conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs, the resonant circuit and the two diodes 21 a and 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2. The further capacitor C11 gets charged unless switching is done at almost zero currents. The state of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 7B differs from the preceding state shown in FIG. 7A in that in the steady state of FIG. 7A the IGBT 1 ib is in the conducting state, whereas in the transient switching state of FIG. 7B the IGBT 1 ib is switched to the non-conducting state.

Next, as shown in FIG. 7C, the IGBT 12 a of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched on to the conducting state. Nevertheless, the current continues flowing via the first capacitor C1, the topmost IGBT 11 a in the series connection of IGBTs of the first switching circuit 1, the further capacitor C11, the diode connected in parallel to the second-bottommost IGBT 12 a (IGBT 12 a is in the conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs, the resonant circuit and the two diodes 21 a and 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2. The further capacitor C11 continues getting charged unless switching is done at almost zero currents. The state of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 7C differs from the preceding state shown in FIG. 7B in that in the transient switching state of FIG. 7B the IGBT 12 a is in the non-conducting state, whereas in the transient switching state of FIG. 7C the IGBT 12 a is switched to the conducting state.

Next, as shown in FIG. 7D, the IGBT 11 a of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched off to the non-conducting state. As a result, the current flows via the resonant circuit, the two diodes 21 a and 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2, the diode connected in parallel to the bottommost IGBT 12 b (IGBT 12 b is in the non-conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs and the diode connected in parallel to the second-bottommost IGBT 12 a (IGBT 12 a is in the conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs. The state of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 7D differs from the preceding state shown in FIG. 7C in that in the transient switching state of FIG. 7C the IGBT 11 a is in the conducting state, whereas in the transient switching state of FIG. 7D the IGBT 11 a is switched to the non-conducting state.

Next, as shown in FIG. 7E, the IGBT 12 b of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched on to the conducting state. Nevertheless, the current continues flowing via the resonant circuit, the two diodes 21 a and 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2, the diode connected in parallel to the bottommost IGBT 12 b (IGBT 12 b is in the conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs and the diode connected in parallel to the second-bottommost IGBT 12 a (IGBT 2 a is in the conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs. The state of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 7E differs from the preceding state shown in FIG. 7D in that in the transient switching state of FIG. 7D the IGBT 12 b is in the non-conducting state, whereas in the transient switching state of FIG. 7E the IGBT 12 b is switched to the conducting state.

Next, as shown in FIG. 7F, as soon as the direction of the current changes: the diode connected in parallel to the IGBT 12 a and the diode connected in parallel to the IGBT 12 b are reverse biased, the diodes 21 a, 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2 are reverse biased and, thus, in the non-conducting state, and the diodes 22 a, 22 b of the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2 are forward biased and, thus, in the conducting state. As a result, current flows via the resonant circuit, the two IGBTs 12 a and 12 b of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1, the second capacitor C2 and the two diodes 22 a, 22 b of the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2. The second capacitor C2 is charged. This state corresponds to the second steady state of the DC/DC power converter 4. The transition between the transient switching state of FIG. 7E and the steady state of FIG. 7F may be instantaneous (transition time=0 ns).

In the light of the above, the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched from the conducting state (FIG. 7A) to the non-conducting state (FIGS. 7D, 7E and 7F) by switching the two IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 from the conducting state to the non-conducting state after each other according to the position in the series connection of the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 such that the IGBT 11 b of the first switching unit 11 connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched at first from the conducting state to the non-conducting state.

The second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched from the non-conducting state (FIG. 7A) to the conducting state (FIGS. 7E and 7F) by switching the two IGBTs 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 from the non-conducting state to the conducting state after each other according to the position in the series connection of the IGBTs 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 such that the switch 12 a of the second switching unit 12 connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched at first from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

In the light of the above, the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched from the conducting state to the non-conducting state and the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched from the non-conducting state to the conducting state, by alternately switching the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 and the IGBTs 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 such that

at first a switch of the first switching unit 11 (namely IGBT 11 b) is switched from the conducting state to the non-conducting state followed by a switch of the second switching unit 12 (namely IGBT 12 a) being switched from the non-conducting state to the conducting state,

the switches 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 are switched after each other from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, and

the switches 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 are switched after each other from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

In the following the control of the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b, 12 a and 12 b of the first switching circuit 1 for switching the DC/DC power converter 4 from the second steady state (shown in FIG. 7F) to the first steady state (shown in FIG. 7A) is described:

As shown in FIG. 7G, at first the IGBT 12 a of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched off to the non-conducting state. As a result, current flows via the resonant circuit, the diode connected in parallel to the second-topmost IGBT 11 b (IGBT 11 b is in the non-conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs, the further capacitor C11, the IGBT 12 b, the second capacitor C2 and the two diodes 22 a, 22 b of the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2. The state of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 7G differs from the preceding state shown in FIG. 7F in that in the steady state of FIG. 7F the IGBT 12 a is in the conducting state, whereas in the transient switching state of FIG. 7G the IGBT 12 a is switched to the non-conducting state.

Next, as shown in FIG. 7H, the IGBT 11 b of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched on to the conducting state. Nevertheless, the current continues flowing via the resonant circuit, the diode connected in parallel to the second-topmost IGBT 11 b (IGBT 11 b is in the conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs, the further capacitor C11, the IGBT 12 b, the second capacitor C2 and the two diodes 22 a, 22 b of the second switching unit 22 of the second switching circuit 2. The state of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 7H differs from the preceding state shown in FIG. 7G in that in the transient switching state of FIG. 7G the IGBT 11 b is in the non-conducting state, whereas in the transient switching state of FIG. 7H the IGBT 11 b is switched to the conducting state.

Next, as shown in FIG. 7I, the IGBT 12 b of the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched off to the non-conducting state. Since the direction of the current changes between the transient switching state of FIG. 7H and the transient switching state of FIG. 7I the current flows in the transient switching state of FIG. 7I as follows: the current flows via the resonant circuit, the two diodes 21 a, 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2, the diode connected in parallel to the bottommost IGBT 12 b (IGBT 12 b is in the non-conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs and the diode connected in parallel to the second-bottommost IGBT 1 a (IGBT 12 a is in the non-conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs. The state of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 7I differs from the preceding state shown in FIG. 7H in that in the transient switching state of FIG. 7H the IGBT 12 b is in the conducting state, whereas in the transient switching state of FIG. 7I the IGBT 12 b is switched to the non-conducting state.

Next, as shown in FIG. 7J, the IGBT 11 a of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched on to the conducting state. In the transient switching state of FIG. 7J the current flows via the resonant circuit, the two diodes 21 a, 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2, the diode connected in parallel to the bottommost IGBT 12 b (IGBT 12 b is in the non-conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs and the diode connected in parallel to the second-bottommost IGBT 12 a (IGBT 12 a is in the non-conducting state) in the series connection of IGBTs. The state of the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIG. 7J differs from the preceding state shown in FIG. 7I in that in the transient switching state of FIG. 7I the IGBT 11 a is in the non-conducting state, whereas in the transient switching state of FIG. 7J the IGBT 11 a is switched to the conducting state. Thus, in the transient switching state of FIG. 7J the DC/DC power converter is ready to excite the resonant circuit.

Next, as shown in FIG. 7A, as soon as a conducting path is established by the two IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1: the current flows via the first capacitor C1, the two IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1, the resonant circuit and the two diodes 21 a, 21 b of the first switching unit 21 of the second switching circuit 2. In the first steady state, the first capacitor C1 is discharged. The transition between the transient switching state of FIG. 7J and the first steady state of FIG. 7A may be instantaneous (transition time=0 ns).

In the light of the above, the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched from the non-conducting state (FIG. 7F) to the conducting state (FIGS. 7J and 7A) by switching the two IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 from the non-conducting state to the conducting state after each other according to the position in the series connection of the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 such that the switch 11 b of the first switching unit 11 connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched at first from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

The second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched from the conducting state (FIG. 7F) to the non-conducting state (FIGS. 7I, 7J and 7A) by switching the two IGBTs 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 from the conducting state to the non-conducting state after each other according to the position in the series connection of the IGBTs 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 such that the IGBT 12 a of the second switching unit 12 connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched at first from the conducting state to the non-conducting state.

In the light of the above, the first switching unit 11 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched from the non-conducting state to the conducting state and the second switching unit 12 of the first switching circuit 1 is switched from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, by alternately switching the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 and the IGBTs 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12, such that

at first a switch of the second switching unit 12 (namely IGBT 12 a) is switched from the conducting state to the non-conducting state followed by a switch of the first switching unit 11 (namely IGBT 11 b) being switched from the non-conducting state to the conducting state,

the switches 12 a, 12 b of the second switching unit 12 are switched after each other from the conducting state to the non-conducting state, and

the switches 11 a, 11 b of the first switching unit 11 are switched after each other from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.

As shown in FIGS. 7A to 7J, each switching unit of the first switching circuit 1 is switched between the conducting state and non-conducting state by switching the switches of the respective switching unit after each other. The two switching units 11 and 12 of the first switching circuit 1 are complementary switched between the conducting and non-conducting state by alternately switching the switches of the two switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1.

The transient switching states of the DC/DC power converter 4 may occur at low or no load current. Therefore, the further capacitor C11 of the first switching circuit 1 of the DC/DC power converter of FIG. 7 may be naturally maintained at half the voltage of the first capacitor C1.

In case the switches 21 a, 21 b, 22 a, 22 b of the second switching circuit 2 are not uncontrollable semiconductor switches (diodes), as it is shown in FIG. 7 , but they are also controllable semiconductor switches, such as IGBTs, (not shown in FIG. 7 ), the switches 21 a, 21 b, 22 a, 22 b of the second switching circuit 2 are switched according with (in line with) the controllable semiconductor switches 11 a, 11 b, 12 a, 12 b of the first switching circuit 1, as described above. That is, corresponding controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 and the second switching circuit 2 are switched together. That is, the topmost switch 21 a in the series connection of switches of the second switching circuit 2 and the topmost switch 11 a in the series connection of switches of the first switching circuit 1 are switched together, the second-topmost switch 21 b in the series connection of switches of the second switching circuit 2 and the second-topmost switch 11 b in the series connection of switches of the first switching circuit 1 are switched together and so on.

The IGBTs 11 a, 11 b, 12 a, 12 b of the first switching circuit 1 may be switched such that the voltage at the further capacitor C11 is equal to the voltage Vin at the first capacitor C1 divided by the number of IGBTs per switching unit of the first switching circuit 1. Thus, in the case of FIG. 7 , the IGBTs 11 a, 11 b, 12 a, 12 b of the first switching circuit 1 may be switched such that the voltage at the further capacitor C11 is equal to half of the voltage Vin at the first capacitor C1.

The switching units 11, 12 of the first switching circuit 1 may be switched between the conducting state and the non-conducting state with a switching frequency that is smaller or equal to the resonant frequency of the resonant circuit. The DC/DC power converter 4 may be switched between the first steady state (shown in FIG. 7A) and the second steady state (shown in FIG. 7F) with a switching frequency that is smaller or equal to the resonant frequency of the resonant circuit of the DC/DC power converter 4.

The above description is correspondingly valid in case each switching unit of the first switching circuit 1 and optionally of the second switching circuit 2 comprises a series connection of three or more controllable semiconductor switches.

For example, the switching times for switching the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 and optionally of the second switching circuit 2 may correspond to tens of microseconds. The delay time between the transient switching states of FIGS. 7B and 7C, the delay time between the transient switching states of FIGS. 7C and 7D and the delay time between the transient switching states of FIGS. 7D and 7E may for example be 100 ns. The delay time between the transient switching states of FIGS. 7G and 7H and the delay time between the transient switching states of FIGS. 7I and 7J may for example be 100 ns. These delay times depend on the turn on (switch on) delays and turn off (switch off) delays of the transistor type, such as IGBTS, BJTs, FETs or MOSFETs, used for implementing the controllable semiconductor switches of the first switching circuit 1 and optionally the second switching circuit 2.

FIGS. 8A and 8B each show a DC/DC power converter arrangement according to an embodiment of the present invention.

The above description of the DC/DC power converter arrangement of the third aspect or any of its implementation forms is accordingly valid for the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIGS. 8A and 8B.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 8A comprises two DC/DC power converters 4 ₁ and 4 ₂. The above description of the DC/DC power converter of the first aspect or any of its implementation forms is accordingly valid for the DC/DC power converters 4 ₁ and 4 ₂ of the DC/DC power converter arrangement of FIG. 8A. The two DC/DC power converters 4 ₁ and 4 ₂ may correspond to the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIGS. 2, 3A, 4A and 5A. That is, the two DC/DC power converters 4 ₁ and 4 ₂ may be implemented as described above with regard to FIGS. 2, 3A, 4A and 5A. The two DC/DC power converters 4 ₁ and 4 ₂ may be identically implemented.

As shown in FIG. 8A, the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 comprises a cascade of two DC/DC power converters 4 ₁ and 4 ₂ that are cascaded. The output of a first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ of the two DC/DC power converters 4 ₁ and 4 ₂ is electrically connected to the input of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ of the two DC/DC power converters 4 ₁ and 4 ₂ such that the first capacitor C1 ₂ of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ is connected in parallel to the second capacitor C2 ₁ of the two capacitors C1 ₁, C2 ₁ of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁. According to FIG. 8A the parallel connection of the first capacitor C1 ₂ of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ and the second capacitor C2 ₁ of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ is implemented by a single capacitor. This is only by way of example and does not limit the present disclosure.

In particular, as shown in FIG. 8A, the optional third output terminal OUT3 ₁ of the output of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ and the first input terminal IN1 ₂ of the input of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ are connected with each other. The second output terminal OUT2 ₁ of the output of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ and the second input terminal IN2 ₂ of the input of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ are connected with each other.

The input of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 8A corresponds to the input of the first DC/DC power converter arrangement 4 ₁. In particular, a first input terminal IN1 of the input of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 corresponds to the first input terminal IN1 ₁ of the input of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ and a second input terminal IN2 of the input of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 corresponds to the second input terminal IN2 ₁ of the input of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁. The output of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 comprises two output terminals OUT1 and OUT2. A first output terminal OUT1 of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 corresponds to the first output terminal OUT1 ₁ of the output of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ and the second output terminal OUT2 of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 corresponds to the second output terminal OUT2 ₂ of the output of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 8A may comprise a control unit (not shown in FIG. 8 ), which is configured to control the DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6. In particular, the control unit may be configured to perform the method according to the second aspect or any of its implementation forms for controlling the DC/DC power converters.

The control unit of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 may comprise or correspond to a microcontroller, controller, microprocessor, processor, field programmable gate array (FPGA), application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) or any combination of the aforementioned components.

The control unit may correspond to a control unit of one DC/DC power converter of the DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6.

In case two or more DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 comprise a control unit for controlling the respective DC/DC power converter, the control units of these two or more DC/DC power converters may be configured to communicate with each other.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 8B corresponds to the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 8A. The difference between these two DC/DC power converter arrangements is the implementation of the resonant circuit 3 of the two DC/DC power converters 4 ₁ and 4 ₂. Namely, as shown in FIG. 8A, the resonant capacitor Cr₁ and resonant inductor Lr₁ of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ as well as the resonant capacitor Cr₂ and resonant inductor Lr₂ of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ are implemented according to the embodiments of FIGS. 3A, 4A and 5A. Thus, reference is made to the description of FIGS. 3A, 4A and 5A for the description of this implementation form. As shown in FIG. 8B, the resonant capacitor Cr₁ and resonant inductor Lr₁ of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ as well as the resonant capacitor Cr₂ and resonant inductor Lr₂ of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ are implemented according to the embodiments of FIGS. 3B, 4B and 5B. Thus, reference is made to the description of FIGS. 3B, 4B and 5B for the description of this implementation form.

The description of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 8A is correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 8B.

FIGS. 9A and 9B each show a DC/DC power converter arrangement according to an embodiment of the present invention.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 9A corresponds to the DC/DC power converter 6 of FIG. 8A, wherein DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 9A comprises an additional third DC/DC power converter 6. The description of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 8A is correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converter arrangement of FIG. 8A. Therefore, in the following mainly the additional features of FIG. 9A are described.

As shown in FIG. 9A, the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 comprises a cascade of three DC/DC power converters 4 ₁, 4 ₂ and 4 ₃ that are cascaded. The connection of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ and the second power converter 4 ₂ is as already described with respect to FIG. 8A.

The output of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ of the three DC/DC power converters 4 ₁, 4 ₂ and 4 ₃ is electrically connected to the input of the third DC/DC power converter 4 ₃ of the of the three DC/DC power converters 4 ₁, 4 ₂ and 4 ₃ such that the first capacitor C1 ₃ of the third DC/DC power converter 4 ₃ is connected in parallel to the second capacitor C2 ₂ of the two capacitors C1 ₂, C2 ₂ of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂. According to FIG. 9A the parallel connection of the first capacitor C1 ₃ of the third DC/DC power converter 4 ₃ and the second capacitor C2 ₂ of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ is implemented by a single capacitor. This is only by way of example and does not limit the present disclosure.

In particular, as shown in FIG. 9A, the optional third output terminal OUT3 ₂ of the output of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ and the first input terminal IN1 ₃ of the input of the third DC/DC power converter 4 ₃ are connected with each other. The second output terminal OUT2 ₂ of the output of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ and the second input terminal IN2 ₃ of the input of the third DC/DC power converter 4 ₃ are connected with each other.

The input of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 9A corresponds to the input of the first DC/DC power converter arrangement 4 ₁. The output of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 comprises two output terminals OUT1 and OUT2. A first output terminal OUT1 of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 corresponds to the first output terminal OUT1 ₁ of the output of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁ and the second output terminal OUT2 of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 corresponds to the second output terminal OUT2 ₃ of the output of the third DC/DC power converter 4 ₃.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 9B corresponds to the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 9A. The difference between these two DC/DC power converter arrangements is the implementation of the resonant circuit 3 of the three DC/DC power converters 4 ₁, 4 ₂ and 4 ₃. Namely, as shown in FIG. 9A, the resonant capacitor Cr₁ and resonant inductor Lr₁ of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁, the resonant capacitor Cr₂ and resonant inductor Lr₂ of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ as well as the resonant capacitor Cr₃ and resonant inductor Lr₃ of the third DC/DC power converter 4 ₃ are implemented according to the embodiments of FIGS. 3A, 4A and 5A. Thus, reference is made to the description of FIGS. 3A, 4A and 5A for the description of this implementation form. As shown in FIG. 9B, the resonant capacitor Cr₁ and resonant inductor Lr₁ of the first DC/DC power converter 4 ₁, the resonant capacitor Cr₂ and resonant inductor Lr₂ of the second DC/DC power converter 4 ₂ as well as the resonant capacitor Cr₃ and resonant inductor Lr₃ of the third DC/DC power converter 4 ₃ are implemented according to the embodiments of FIGS. 3B, 4B and 5B. Thus, reference is made to the description of FIGS. 3B, 4B and 5B for the description of this implementation form.

The description of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 9A is correspondingly valid for the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIG. 9B.

According to the present disclosure, the DC/DC power converter 6 arrangement may comprise more than three DC/DC power converters that are cascaded with each other. The above description with respect to FIGS. 8 A, 8B and 9A, 9B is correspondingly valid for this case.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIGS. 8A and 8B may be configured to convert an input voltage at its input to an output voltage at its output, which is a multiple of the input voltage and which is greater than the output voltage that may be provided by a single DC/DC power converter at its output, such as one of the DC/DC power converters of the FIGS. 2, 3, 4 and 5 . The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIGS. 9A and 9B may be configured to convert an input voltage at its input to an output voltage at its output, which is a multiple of the input voltage and which is greater than the output voltage that may be provided by the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIGS. 8A and 8B at its output. According to an embodiment, the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIGS. 8A and 8B may convert an input voltage at its input to an output voltage at its output, which is three times the input voltage. According to an embodiment, the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIGS. 9A and 9B may converter an input voltage at its input to an output voltage at its output, which is four times the input voltage.

In case the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 comprises more than three DC/DC power converters that are cascaded, the DC/DC power converter arrangement may be configured to convert an input voltage at its input to an output voltage at its output, which is an integer multiple of the input voltage. The integer multiple is one more than the number of DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6.

FIG. 10 shows a system according to an embodiment of the present invention.

The above description of the system of the fourth aspect or any of its implementation forms is accordingly valid for the system of FIG. 10 .

According to FIG. 10 , the system 9 comprises a DC/DC power converter 4 according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms. Alternatively, the system 9 comprises a DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 according to the third aspect or any of its implementation forms. The system 9 further comprises a source 7 that is connected to the input, in particular to two input terminals IN1, IN2 of the input, of the DC/DC power converter 4 respectively DC/DC power converter arrangement 6. The source is configured to provide a DC input voltage Vin to the DC/DC power converter 4 respectively DC/DC power converter arrangement 6. For example, the DC input voltage Vin may be between 800 V and 1500 V. In this case, the switches of the DC/DC power converter 4 respectively the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 may be for example implemented by 950 V or 1200 V voltage blocking class devices. Those devices are low in cost and losses.

The DC/DC power converter 4 is configured to convert the DC input voltage Vin to a DC output voltage Vout, wherein the DC output voltage Vout is a multiple of the DC input voltage Vin. In particular, the DC output voltage Vout may be two times greater than the DC input voltage Vin.

The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 is configured to convert the DC input voltage Vin to a DC output voltage Vout, wherein the DC output voltage Vout is a multiple of the DC input voltage Vin. In particular, the DC output voltage Vout is a multiple of the DC input voltage Vin and may be greater than two times the DC input voltage Vin. According to an implementation form, the DC output voltage Vout (converted by the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6) may be an integer multiple of the DC input voltage, wherein the integer multiple is one more than the number of DC/DC power converters of the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6.

The source 7 may comprise or correspond to one or more of the following elements: a preceding DC/DC power converter arrangement, an AC/DC power converter, a battery (optionally rechargeable), a solar photo-voltaic (PV) system with one or more solar PV panels, one or more solar PV strings and a wind energy system.

The preceding DC/DC power converter arrangement may correspond to the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms or to the DC/DC power converter arrangement according to the third aspect or any of its implementation forms.

The DC/DC power converter 4 of the system 9 may correspond to the DC/DC power converter 4 of FIGS. 2, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, and 5A, 5B. That is, the DC/DC power converter 4 of the system 9 may be implemented as described above with regard to FIGS. 2, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 5A, 5B, 6 and 7 .

The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of the system 9 may correspond to the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of FIGS. 8A, 8B and 9A, 9B. That is, the DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 of the system 9 may be implemented as described above with regard to FIGS. 8A, 8B and 9A, 9B.

Optionally, the system 9 may further comprise an electric circuit 8 that is connected to the output of the DC/DC power converter 4 respectively DC/DC power converter arrangement 6. In particular, the electric circuit 8 is connected to two output terminals OUT1, OUT2 of the output of the DC/DC power converter 4 respectively DC/DC power converter arrangement 6. Optionally, the electric circuit 8 is also connected to an optional third output terminal OUT3 of the output of the DC/DC power converter 4 respectively DC/DC power converter arrangement 6.

The DC/DC power converter 4 is configured to provide the DC output voltage Vout to the electric circuit 8. The DC/DC power converter arrangement 6 is configured to provide the DC output voltage Vout to the electric circuit 8.

The electric circuit 8 may comprise or correspond to one or more of the following elements: a DC/DC power converter arrangement, a DC/AC power converter, a DC transmission system, a solid state transformer and an electric load. The DC/DC power converter arrangement may correspond to the DC/DC power converter according to the first aspect or any of its implementation forms or to the DC/DC power converter arrangement according to the third aspect or any of its implementation forms.

The DC/DC power converter proposed by the present disclosure is based on low voltage and, thus, low cost semiconductor devices. Thus, the DC/DC power converter according to the present disclosure may be produced with low costs and comprises lower conduction losses. Since the DC/DC power converter proposed by the present disclosure is based on a resonant balancer principle, i.e. it comprises a resonant circuit, the DC/DC power converter comprises minimum switching losses and, thus a high efficiency. In addition, in case of switching controllable semiconductor switches of the DC/DC power converter with a constant duty cycle of 50%, no complex controller is needed and simple gate drivers are sufficient improving costs (low costs). 

What is claimed is:
 1. A DC/DC power converter, comprising: two switching circuits electrically connected in series, two capacitors electrically connected in series, wherein the series connection of the two capacitors is electrically connected in parallel to the series connection of the two switching circuits, and a resonant circuit comprising a resonant capacitor and a resonant inductor, wherein the resonant circuit is electrically connected to the two switching circuits; wherein a first capacitor of the two capacitors is electrically connected in parallel to an input of the DC/DC power converter; wherein the series connection of the two switching circuits is electrically connected in parallel to an output of the DC/DC power converter; wherein each switching circuit of the two switching circuits comprises two switching units electrically connected in series, wherein each switching unit comprises two or more switches electrically connected in series; wherein a first switching circuit of the two switching circuits is electrically connected to a first side of the first capacitor that is opposite to a second side of the first capacitor, and the second side of the first capacitor is connected to a second capacitor of the two capacitors; wherein the two or more switches of each switching unit of the two switching units of the first switching circuit are controllable semiconductor switches; wherein the first switching circuit further comprises one or more further capacitors electrically connected to the two switching units of the first switching circuit; and wherein an output voltage Vout of the DC/DC power converter is a multiple of an input voltage Vin of the DC/DC power converter.
 2. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 1, wherein: the two or more switches of each switching unit of the second switching circuit of the two switching circuits are uncontrollable semiconductor switches; or the two or more switches of each switching unit of the second switching circuit of the two switching circuits are controllable semiconductor switches, and the second switching circuit further comprises one or more further capacitors electrically connected to the two switching units of the second switching circuit.
 3. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 1, wherein a number of one or more further capacitors of at least one switching circuit of the two switching circuits is one less than a number of the two or more switches of each switching unit of the at least one switching circuit.
 4. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 1, wherein: in a case that each switching unit of a respective switching circuit comprises two switches connected in series and the respective switching circuit comprises one further capacitor, the one further capacitor of the respective switching circuit is connected between a midpoint of a series connection of the two switches of a first switching unit of the respective switching circuit and a midpoint of a series connection of the two switches of the second switching unit of the respective switching circuit; or in a case that each switching unit of a respective switching circuit comprises three or more switches electrically connected in series and the respective switching circuit comprises two or more further capacitors, each further capacitor of the two or more further capacitors of the respective switching circuit is connected between a first node that is between two switches of a first switching unit of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit and a second node that is between two switches of a second switching unit of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit, and wherein: the first node and the second node are equally distant, in terms of number of nodes, to a midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit, and the two or more further capacitors of the respective switching circuit are connected to different nodes of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit.
 5. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 1, wherein the one or more further capacitors of the first switching circuit are dimensioned such that a voltage at a further capacitor of the one or more further capacitors, which is connected to nodes of the two switching units of the first switching circuit that are nearest to a midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit, corresponds to a voltage at the first capacitor divided by a number of switches per switching unit of the first switching circuit.
 6. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 1, wherein: the resonant capacitor and the resonant inductor are connected in series between a midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit and a midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the second switching circuit; or the resonant capacitor is electrically connected between the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the second switching circuit, and the resonant inductor is electrically connected between a midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors and a midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits.
 7. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 1, wherein: the input of the DC/DC power converter comprises two input terminals and the output of the DC/DC power converter comprises two output terminals; a first input terminal of the two input terminals and a first output terminal of the two output terminals is electrically connected to a first end of the series connection of the two capacitors and a first end of the series connection of the two switching circuits; a second input terminal of the two input terminals is connected to a midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors; and a second output terminal of the two output terminals is connected to a second end of the series connection of the two capacitors and a second end of the series connection of the two switching circuits.
 8. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 7, wherein: the output of the DC/DC power converter further comprises a third output terminal; and wherein: the third output terminal is electrically connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits, in a case that the resonant capacitor and the resonant inductor are electrically connected in series; or the third output terminal is electrically connected to the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors, in case the resonant inductor is electrically connected between the midpoint of the series connection of the two capacitors and the midpoint of the series connection of the two switching circuits.
 9. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 1, further comprising: a controller, configured to: complementary switch the two switching units of the first switching circuit between a conducting state and a non-conducting state; and complementary switch the two switching units of the second switching circuit between the conducting state and the non-conducting state.
 10. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 9, wherein the controller is configured to switch each switching unit of a respective switching circuit between the conducting state and non-conducting state by switching the switches of the respective switching unit.
 11. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 9, wherein the controller is configured to: complementary switch the two switching units of a respective switching circuit between the conducting and non-conducting state by alternately switching the switches of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit.
 12. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 9, wherein the controller is configured to: switch each switching unit of the two switching units of a respective switching circuit of the two switching circuits from the conducting state to the non-conducting state by switching the two or more switches of the respective switching unit from the conducting state to the non-conducting state according to a position in the series connection of the two or more switches of the respective switching unit in a manner that a switch of the respective switching unit that is connected to a midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit is switched at first from the conducting state to the non-conducting state.
 13. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 9, wherein the controller is configured to: switch each switching unit of the two switching units of a respective switching circuit of the two switching circuits from the non-conducting state to the conducting state by switching the two or more switches of the respective switching unit from the non-conducting state to the conducting state according to a position in the series connection of the two or more switches of the respective switching unit in a manner that a switch of the respective switching unit that is connected to a midpoint of the series connection of the two switching units of the respective switching circuit is switched at first from the non-conducting state to the conducting state.
 14. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 9, wherein the controller is configured to switch the two switching units of the first switching circuit or the two switching units of the second switching circuit between the conducting state and the non-conducting state with a switching frequency that is smaller or equal to a resonant frequency of the resonant circuit.
 15. The DC/DC power converter according to claim 9, wherein the controller is configured to: switch the switches of the first switching circuit in a manner that a the voltage at a further capacitor of the one or more further capacitors, which is connected to nodes of the two switching units of the first switching circuit that are nearest to a midpoint between the series connection of the two switching units of the first switching circuit, corresponds to the voltage Vin at the first capacitor divided by a number of switches per switching unit of the first switching circuit.
 16. A method for controlling switching of the DC/DC power converter according to claim 1, comprising: complementary switching, using a controller, the two switching units of the first switching circuit between a conducting state and a non-conducting state; and complementary switching, using the controller, the two switching units of the second switching circuit are between the conducting state and the non-conducting state.
 17. A DC/DC power converter arrangement comprising: a cascade of a plurality of DC/DC power converters, wherein each DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters comprises two switching circuits electrically connected in series, two capacitors electrically connected in series, wherein the series connection of the two capacitors is electrically connected in parallel to the series connection of the two switching circuits, and a resonant circuit comprising a resonant capacitor and a resonant inductor, wherein the resonant circuit is electrically connected to the two switching circuits; wherein a first capacitor of the two capacitors of each DC/DC power converter is electrically connected in parallel to an input of the respective DC/DC power converter and the series connection of the two switching circuits of each DC/DC power converter is electrically connected in parallel to an output of the respective DC/DC power converter; and wherein the output of a first DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters is electrically connected to the input of a second DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters in a manner that a first capacitor of the second DC/DC power converter is connected in parallel to a second capacitor of the two capacitors of the first DC/DC power converter.
 18. The DC/DC power converter arrangement according to claim 17, wherein the plurality of DC/DC power converters comprises a first DC/DC power converter and at least one further DC/DC power converter, and an input of each further DC/DC power converter of the plurality of DC/DC power converters is connected to an output of a respective preceding DC/DC power converter in a manner that a first capacitor of the respective further DC/DC power converter is connected in parallel to a second capacitor of the respective preceding DC/DC power converter.
 19. A system, comprising: the DC/DC power converter according to claim 1; and a source that is connected to the input of the DC/DC power converter; wherein the source is configured to provide the input voltage Vin to the input of the DC/DC power converter and the DC/DC power converter is configured to convert the input voltage Vin to the output voltage Vout, and wherein the input voltage Vin and the output voltage Vout are DC voltages.
 20. A system, comprises the DC/DC power converter arrangement according to claim 17, and a source that is connected to a first DC/DC power converter of the DC/DC power converter arrangement, wherein the source is configured to provide a DC input voltage Vin to the input of the DC/DC power converter arrangement, and the DC/DC power converter arrangement is configured to convert the input voltage Vin to a DC output voltage Vout, wherein the DC output voltage Vout is a multiple of the DC input voltage Vin. 